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E-raamat: Creolization and Transatlantic Blackness: The Visual and Material Cultures of Slavery

Edited by (NSCAD University, Canada)
  • Formaat: 158 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Nov-2024
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040164815
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  • Formaat: 158 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 12-Nov-2024
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040164815

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Departing from more conscribed definitions, this book argues for an expansion of the concept of ‘Creolization’ in terms of duration, temporality, population, and importantly, in regional scope, which also impact climate and the practices of slavery that are typically included and excluded from consideration.

Eschewing the normative focus on language and music, the authors instead center art and visual, and material cultures, as both outcomes and practices, in their explorations to consider the ways that cultural production in the period of slavery and its aftermath was irrevocably impacted by the collision of races and cultures in the Americas. The chapters probe how creolization unfolded for di erently constituted individuals and populations, as well as how it came to be articulated both in the historical moments of its enactment and its retroactive cultural representations and production. In so doing, they seek to both expand the terrain (literally and ?guratively) of the de nition of creolization and to turn towards an examination of its relevance for art and visual, and material cultures of the Transatlantic world.

The chapters in this book were originally published in African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal.



Departing from more conscribed definitions, this book argues for an expansion of the concept of ‘Creolization’ in terms of duration, temporality, population, and importantly, in regional scope, which also impact climate and the practices of slavery that are typically included and excluded from consideration.

Introduction: Expanding and Complicating the Concept of Creolization
1.
Blackness and Lines of Beauty in the Eighteenth-Century Anglophone Atlantic
World
2. Concatenation: Syncretism in the Life Cycle of David Drakes
Earthenware
3. [ A] tone of voice peculiar to New-England: Fugitive Slave
Advertisements and the Heterogeneity of Enslaved People of African Descent in
Eighteenth-Century Quebec
4. Creolization on Screen: Guy Deslaurierss The
Middle Passage as Afro-Diasporic Discourse [ Le passage du milieu]
5. Baskets
of Rice: Creolization and Material Culture from West Africa to South
Carolinas Lowcountry
6. The Wages of Empire: American Inventions of
Mixed-Race Identities and Natasha Tretheweys Thrall (2012)
7. From Raw to
Refined: Edouard Duval-Carriés Sugar Conventions (2013)
Charmaine A. Nelson is a Provost Professor of Art History in the Department of the History of Art and Architecture at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA. She is also the Director of the Slavery North Initiative which focuses on the study of Transatlantic Slavery in Canada and the US North. Nelson has made ground-breaking contributions to the fields of the Visual Culture of Slavery, Race and Representation, and Black Canadian Studies. She has published eight books including The Color of Stone: Sculpting the Black Female Subject in Nineteenth-Century America (2007), Slavery, Geography, and Empire in Nineteenth-Century Marine Landscapes of Montreal and Jamaica (2016), and The Precariousness of Freedom: Slave Resistance as Experience, Process and Representation (2024).