Representations of blackness and the performance of identities

cover image

Where to find it

Davis Library (5th floor)

Call Number
GN645 .R47 1999
Status
Available

Stone Center Library

Call Number
GN645 .R47 1999 c. 2
Status
Available

Authors, etc.

Names:

Summary

The essays gathered in this volume deal with representations of blackness and the performance of black identities in various historically determined societal contexts of the Americas, Benin, and Spain. The book is grounded on the premise that representations constitute, in part, the world in which we live. An important aspect of the struggles of dominated people consists in more or less overtly challenging, manipulating, combatting, negating, and sometimes inverting representations of themselves reproduced in the dominant discourse of their national society. The contributors approach various forms of blackness within the fluctuation of political, economic, and social processes embedded in particular time/space contexts, which are constituted within local, regional, national, and transnational dimensions.

Identities, whatever they may be, cannot be defined once and for all in fixed or essentialist terms as if they were unchanging or frozen in time and space. If, as this book proposes, identities are fluid, it is because they are constantly enacted and reenacted, performed anew within specific situations, and within changing socioeconomic and political contexts that provide sites for their negotiations and renegotiations, definitions and redefinitions. Thus, the book approaches black identities as performances.

Contents

  • Figures p. ix
  • Preface and Acknowledgments p. xi
  • Introduction p. xiii
  • I. Celebrations
  • 1. Festive Rituals, Religious Associations, and Ethnic Reaffirmation of Black Andalusians: Antecedents of the Black Confraternities and Cabildos in the Americas p. 3 Isidoro Moreno
  • 2. Presence of Blackness and Representations of Jewishness in the Afro-Esmeraldian Celebrations of the Semana Santa (Ecuador) p. 19 Jean Muteba Rahier
  • 3. Re-/Presenting Black Female Identity in Brazil: "Filhas d'Oxum" in Bahia Carnival p. 49 Carole Boyce Davies
  • 4. Samba Schools: The Logic of Orgy and Blackness in Rio de Janeiro p. 69 Myrian Sepulveda dos Santos
  • 5. On the Apparent Carnivalization of Literature from the French Caribbean p. 91 Maryse Conde
  • II. Social Arenas
  • 6. Kwanzaa and the U.S. Ethnic Mosaic p. 101 Ariana Hernandez-Reguant
  • 7. Identity, Arena, and Performance: Being West Indian in the San Francisco Bay Area p. 123 Percy C. Hintzen
  • 8. Uptown Ladies and Downtown Women: Female Representations of Class and Color in Jamaica p. 147 Gina Ulysse
  • 9. Representations of Blackness in Colombian Popular Music p. 173 Peter Wade
  • III. African and Native American Perspectives
  • 10. In Memory of the Slaves: An African View of the Diaspora in the Americas p. 195 Peter Sutherland
  • 11. Imagery of "Blackness" in Indigenous Myth, Discourse, and Ritual p. 213 Norman E. Whitten, Jr. and Rachel Corr
  • Bibliography p. 235
  • Index p. 255
  • About the Contributors p. 261

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