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2. Disney's Tia Dalma: A Critical Interrogation of an 'Imagineered' Priestess
- Collection:
- Black Caribbean Literature (BCL)
- Contributers:
- Samuel,Kameelah Martin (Author)
- Format:
- Journal Article
- Publication Date:
- 2012 /Spring
- Location:
- African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Journal Title:
- Black Women, Gender & Families
- Journal Title Details:
- 6(1)
- Notes:
- The conjure woman has long lived as a popular American cultural icon, so much so that it seemed destined that multimedia conglomerate the Walt Disney Company would eventually adopt and embrace her. The conjure woman's likeness is reflected in the Disney feature films Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest (2006) and Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End (2007). This essay investigates just what happens to black women and spirit work when placed in the hands of Disney, a corporation with a sordid history of pirating in another context. The work is particularly invested in complicating black female body politics by addressing the additional stigma against female spiritual autonomy. How is an association with African spiritual cosmologies inscribed on the physicality of black women in popular culture? I focus my attention on Tia Dalma, the minor black female character engaged in Vodou in the Pirates of the Caribbean franchise, applying a close reading of the spiritual iconography and other cinematic coding surrounding her performance of African-based spirituality. I assess Disney's appropriation of black cultural forms in the construction of fantasy and fairytale.
3. Guess Who's Going to Be Dinner: Sidney Poitier, Black Militancy, and the Ambivalence of Race in Romero's Night of the Living Dead
- Collection:
- Black Caribbean Literature (BCL)
- Contributers:
- Bruce,Barbara S. (Author), Moreman,Christopher M. (Editor), and Rushton,Cory James (Editor)
- Format:
- Book, Section
- Publication Date:
- 2011
- Published:
- Jefferson, NC: McFarland
- Location:
- African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Journal Title:
- Race, Oppression and the Zombie: Essays on Cross-Cultural Appropriations of the Caribbean Tradition
- Journal Title Details:
- pp. 60-73
4. Heading South: Love/Sex, Necropolitics, and Decolonial Romance
- Collection:
- Black Caribbean Literature (BCL)
- Contributers:
- Tate,Shirley (Author)
- Format:
- Journal Article
- Publication Date:
- 2011-07
- Location:
- African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Journal Title:
- Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism (SmallAxe)
- Journal Title Details:
- 35 : 43-58
- Notes:
- Reading Heading South as a decolonial romance reveals anxiety about the liminal location of young male citizens in 1970s Haiti caught within the necropower of state terror and US imperialism. Focusing on young men selling 'romance' on the beach within the continuing colonial relations between the United States and Haiti and black and white bodies, the film engages with the limits of transracial, heterosexual romance in sex tourism. The impossibility of romance shows that for Haitian citizens, nationalist redemption lies in politics not in transracial intimacies. However, politics is itself necropolitical, since death is the only passage to narratable citizenship. As a decolonial moment, death speaks about the necropower of daily existence for Haitian citizens caught between state terror and US imperialism; asserts agency in the 'will to death in order to be free'; and highlights the disposability and (un)grievability of poor, young black bodies in Baby Doc Duvalier's Haiti.
5. Re-Framing the Colonial Caribbean: Joscelyn Gardner's White Skin, Black Kin: A Creole Conversation Piece
- Collection:
- Black Caribbean Literature (BCL)
- Contributers:
- Simpson,Hyacinth M. (Author)
- Format:
- Journal Article
- Publication Date:
- 2012-03
- Location:
- African American Research Center, Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Journal Title:
- Postcolonial Studies
- Journal Title Details:
- 15(1) : 87-104
- Notes:
- The article discusses the role that the visual arts and museums—through the way their framing and selection choices shape viewers’ perception—play in the construction and deconstruction of post/colonial Caribbean identities. The locus of the analysis is a multimedia installation titled White Skin, Black Kin: A Creole Conversation Piece, which was mounted at the Barbados Museum by Barbadian Canadian visual artist Joscelyn Gardner in 2004. The artist's aim in the installation was to expose the telling gaps, silences, and omissions in regard to black and white kinship and inter-racial relations in artistic productions of the colonial period. One such production was the sub-genre of portraiture known as the conversation piece, which was fashionable among an emerging middle class that included colonial landowners and merchants eager to use that visual medium to simultaneously document the wealth their colonial connections brought them and disavow their use and abuse of black bodies to create that wealth. In challenging the conventions of the conversation piece, Gardner recovers unspoken and suppressed stories from the colonial Caribbean past in order to re-present black and white Creole females identities; and in her use of the installation to ‘intervene’ into items displayed in permanent exhibits, she demonstrates how the Museum can become a site of active contestation of received knowledge.