Arielle Antwine

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Episode 5: Creating Your Own Superher-Ho with Nox Falls

Ari interviews world-renowned burlesque Queen, Nox Falls, about their journey from Slam Poetry nights in a small-town Texas coffee-shop to becoming one of the industry’s leading voices and award-winning performers. Nox answers Burning Questions like:

  • Emotional Vulnerability vs Physical Vulnerability

  • How sensuality is key in creating their most fabulous & definitive costume lewks

  • The importance of research and mentorship in any art form

  • Black Fetishization; how the rise of the "hoodrat & hoochie" tropes both inform and polarize their creativity

Editor’s Note: Check out Nox’s Article for 21st Century Burlesque!

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Featured in this Episode

About our Guest: Nox Falls is an award-winning international burlesque artist, performing their brand of unapologetic raunch and ever-evolving representation.

Pronouns: They/Them (all)

More from Nox: Read Nox’s article for 20th-Century Burlesque here // Nox’s costuming IG account - Doomwitch Crafting

Follow Nox: Website // Instagram // Twitter // YouTube // TikTok

Resources, Tangents. & Mentions:

Grace Jones

Jet Beauty of the Week

Non-Binary

Pansexual - Etymology & History

Fetishization

Parody Porn Reddit (NSFW)

The Original Magic Wand x Hitachi

Sex Ed // Definitions:

Pansexuality - Describes someone who has the potential for emotional, romantic or sexual attraction to people of any gender though not necessarily simultaneously, in the same way or to the same degree. Sometimes used interchangeably with bisexual. From Human Rights Campaign

Non-Binary - People whose gender is not male or female From National Center for Transgender Equality

Bisexual - A person emotionally, romantically or sexually attracted to more than one sex, gender or gender identity though not necessarily simultaneously, in the same way or to the same degree. Sometimes used interchangeably with pansexual. From Human Rights Campaign

Racial Fetishization - Only acknowledging and fixating on someone's race, making it the only part of their identity one considers // considers attractive. The person’s personality and opinions are not taken into account and one’s perception of them is often based on harmful stereotypes. Adapted from Medium

Sources:

John H. Johnson Wiki

Jet Magazine Wiki

An ode to ‘Jet’ magazine’s ‘Beauty of the Week’ — The Undefeated

Define Black: One the Exoticism of Black Women — BlackFeminisms.com

LGBTQ+ Terminology / Vocabulary Primer PDF — NewYork-Presbyterian

Glossary of Terms — Human Rights Campaign

Understanding Non-Binary People: How to Be Respectful and Supportive — The National Center for Transgender Equality

Bisexual vs. Pansexual: What's The Difference? — Luxander on Youtube

9 Things People Get Wrong About Being Non-Binary — TeenVogue

History of Bisexuality Wiki

The Colonial Roots of the Racial Fetishization of Black Women — by Caren M.Holmes

The Real Difference Between Racial Preference And Racial Fetishism — Medium

It’s Not a Compliment: How Racial Fetishism has Colored Online Dating — Medium

Is Your Sexual Desire for Black People Racist? 3 Questions to Reveal the Truth by Breeshia Wade — EverydayFeminism.com