Performing Race and Erasure
Cuba, Haiti, and US Culture, 1898–1940
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Palgrave Macmillan
Published:17th Jun '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
"Riley's sophisticated study expands and challenges our knowledge of race, empire, and nation. She shows that the U.S. did not just export racial ideas and practices to the Caribbean islands it occupied and attempted to control. Race at home was also remade in ruling, fearing, and imagining Cuba and Haiti. Seeing music and performance more generally as sites of empire's memory and forgetting Performing Race and Erasure brilliantly shows that a hardening sense that race could be reduced to black and white took shape outside the U.S. as well as inside." (David Roediger, Foundation Distinguished Professor of International & Interdisciplinary Studies, University of Kansas, USA)
In this book, Shannon Rose Riley provides a critically rich investigation of representations of Cuba and Haiti in US culture in order to analyze their significance not only to the emergence of empire but especially to the reconfiguration of US racial structuresalong increasingly biracial lines.In this book, Shannon Rose Riley provides a critically rich investigation of representations of Cuba and Haiti in US culture in order to analyze their significance not only to the emergence of empire but especially to the reconfiguration of US racial structuresalong increasingly biracial lines. Based on impressive research and with extensive analysis of various textual and performance forms including a largely unique set of skits, plays, songs, cultural performances and other popular amusements, Riley shows that Cuba and Haiti were particularly meaningful to the ways that people in the US re-imagined themselves as black or white and that racial positions were renegotiated through what she calls acts of palimpsest: marking and unmarking, racing and erasing difference. Riley’s book demands a reassessment of the importance of the occupations of Cuba and Haiti to US culture, challenging conventional understandings of performance, empire, and race at the turn of the twentieth century.
ISBN: 9781137592101
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 4753g
273 pages
1st ed. 2016