Migrating the Black Body explores how visual media—from painting to photography, from global independent cinema to Hollywood movies, from posters and broadsides to digital media, from public art to graphic novels—has shaped diasporic imaginings of the individual and collective self. How is the travel of black bodies reflected in reciprocal black images? How is blackness forged and remade through diasporic visual encounters and reimagined through revisitations with the past? And how do visual technologies structure the way we see African subjects and subjectivity? This volume brings together an international group of scholars and artists who explore these questions in visual culture for the historical and contemporary African diaspora. Examining subjects as wide-ranging as the appearance of blackamoors in Russian and Swedish imperialist paintings, the appropriation of African and African American liberation images for Chinese Communist Party propaganda, and the role of You Tube videos in establishing connections between Ghana and its international diaspora, these essays investigate routes of migration, both voluntary and forced, stretching across space, place, and time.
Tabela de Conteúdo
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Leigh Raiford and Heike Raphael-Hernandez
Part One | Making Blackness Serve
1. Containing Bodies—Enscandalizing Enslavement: Stasis and Movement at the Juncture of Slave-Ship Images and Texts /Carsten Junker
2. Russian Blackamoors: From Grand-Manner Portraiture to Alphabet in Pictures / Irina Novikova
3. Migrating Images of the Black Body Politic and the Sovereign State: Haiti in the 1850s / Karen N. Salt
4. Playing the White Knight: Badin, Chess, and Black Self-Fashioning in Eighteenth-Century Sweden / Joachim Östlund
5. Making Blackness Serve China: The Image of Afro-Asia in Chinese Political Posters / Robeson Taj Frazier
Part Two | Dreaming Diasporas
6. The Glamorous One-Two Punch: Visualizing Celebrity, Masculinity, and Boxer Alfonso Teofilo Brown in Early Twentieth-Century Paris / Lyneise Williams
7. The Here and Now of Eslanda Robeson’s African Journey / Leigh Raiford
8. Black and Cuba: An Interview with Filmmaker Robin J. Hayes / Robin J. Hayes and Julia Roth
9. Return to Which Roots? Interracial Documemoirs by Macky Alston, Eliaichi Kimaro, and Mo Asumang / Cedric Essi
10. Dreaming Diasporas / Cheryl Finley
Part Three | Differently Black
11. Differently Black: The Fourth Great Migration and Black Catholic Saints in Ramin Bahrani’s Goodbye Solo and Jim Sheridan’s In America / Charles I. Nero
12. Coloured in South Africa: An Interview with Filmmaker Kiersten Dunbar Chace and Photojournalist Rushay Booysen / Sonja Georgi and Pia Wiegmink
13. When Home Meets Diaspora at the Door of No Return: Cinematic Encounters in Sankofa and Little Senegal / Heike Raphael-Hernandez
14. Of Plastic Ducks and Cockle Pickers: African Atlantic Artists and Critiques of Bonded Labor across Chronologies / Alan Rice
15. At Home, Online: Affective Exchange and the Diasporic Body in Ghanaian Internet Video / Reginold A. Royston
Part 4 | Afrofabulation
16. Habeas Ficta: Fictive Ethnicity, Affecting Representations, and Slaves on Screen / Tavia Nyong’o
17. The Black Body as Photographic Image: Video Light in Postcolonial Jamaica / Krista Thompson
18. The Not-Yet Justice League: Fantasy, Redress, and Transatlantic Black History on the Comic Book Page / Darieck Scott
List of Contributors
Index
Sobre o autor
Heike Raphael-Hernandez is professor of English at the University of Maryland University College, Europe and guest professor of American cultural studies at the University of Würzburg, Germany.Raphael-Hernandez is author of Contemporary African American Women Writers and Ernst Bloch’s Principle of Hope (Edwin Mellen, 2008), editor of Blackening Europe: The African American Presence (Routledge, 2004) and co-editor of Afro Asian Encounters: Culture, History, Politics (NYU Press, 2006).