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ix | |
Acknowledgments |
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xiii | |
Introduction |
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1 | (24) |
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The term "Latin American" |
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3 | (1) |
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4 | (1) |
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Much more than primitivism |
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5 | (5) |
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Reduced to Latin Americans |
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10 | (2) |
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Parisian figurations of Blackness from the mid-nineteenth to the early twentieth centuries |
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12 | (3) |
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15 | (10) |
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1 Playing Up Blackness and Indianness, Downplaying Europeanness |
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25 | (30) |
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Editing Francisco Laso: Racializing Spanish and Portuguese Americans |
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28 | (5) |
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33 | (5) |
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Justified by anthropology: Quatrefages, Hamy, and the casta paintings |
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38 | (3) |
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Latin American self-representation |
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41 | (3) |
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The shifting rastaquouere |
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44 | (3) |
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Maintaining anthropological interpretations in the early twentieth century |
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47 | (2) |
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49 | (6) |
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2 Chocolat the Clown: Not Just Black |
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55 | (42) |
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Chocolat and Footit: Partners in contrast |
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57 | (3) |
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57 | (1) |
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The give and take of Chocolat and Footit |
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58 | (2) |
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Chocolat and Footit at the Nouveau Cirque |
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60 | (1) |
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60 | (6) |
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62 | (2) |
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64 | (2) |
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66 | (5) |
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70 | (1) |
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Chocolat, that special ingredient: The racially mixed object of desire |
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71 | (4) |
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Complicating notions of minstrelsy |
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75 | (1) |
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75 | (1) |
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Representations through clothing |
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76 | (3) |
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Sexualizing Black dandies |
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79 | (4) |
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83 | (1) |
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84 | (7) |
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Chocolat, object of gay desire |
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85 | (2) |
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Chocolat and the elite and the virile |
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87 | (4) |
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91 | (6) |
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3 Alfonso Teofilo Brown: Agency and Complications of Blackness and Europeanness |
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97 | (36) |
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Sport and the imagined ideal male body |
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97 | (7) |
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Black boxers in turn-of-the-century France |
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104 | (1) |
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105 | (5) |
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The purity and hybridity of gangly Brown |
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110 | (3) |
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113 | (3) |
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Images of Black difference |
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116 | (6) |
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122 | (3) |
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125 | (8) |
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4 Figari's Blacks: Negotiating French and Latin Blackness |
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133 | (56) |
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134 | (1) |
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Contested Whiteness and the Black body |
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135 | (4) |
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Conceptualizing regional identity |
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139 | (5) |
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Through the anthropological gaze |
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144 | (3) |
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Candombe as framing device |
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147 | (10) |
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Gender and race in Candombe |
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157 | (1) |
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158 | (4) |
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162 | (3) |
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Increasing Latin American presence in Paris |
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165 | (2) |
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Perceptions of Black Uruguayans |
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167 | (3) |
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Figari's evolution in Paris |
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170 | (3) |
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Contradictions and contrasts between Figari's paintings and written work |
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173 | (7) |
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180 | (9) |
Coda |
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189 | (4) |
Bibliography |
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193 | (12) |
Index |
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205 | |