학술논문

Laura Smalligan's Jonkonnu , a Jamaican Slave Dance : Contesting the African in African-American.
Document Type
Article
Source
Slavery & Abolition. Jan2014, Vol. 35 Issue 1, p142-155. 14p. 1 Color Photograph.
Subject
*JONKONNU (Festival)
*DANCE & ethnology
*AFRICAN diaspora
*ETHNOGENESIS
*RACIAL identity of African Americans
AFRICAN dance
BLACK Caribbean people
Language
ISSN
0144-039X
Abstract
Using insights from her field of West African art and ethnography, Laura Smalligan (in an earlier journal article concerning the Jamaican slave dance, Jonkonnu) opens up and renews challenging perspectives regarding the indispensable African content of New World slavery. Smalligan argues that the Connu slave pageant stemmed from a particular time, place and outlook (of slaves from the Bight of Biafra, modern Nigeria). Discussion here pivots on two comparisons: of dance, often accompanied by trance states (from West Africa to Anglophone plantation societies in the Caribbean and mainland North America); and, of the way contemporary scholars now – often smitten in this generation by the postmodern ‘literary turn’ – view, prematurely, slave ethnicity as heuristically vague and unmanageable, as opposed to local slave society people, black and white, then who in their ordinary talk and activities depicted certain slaves ethnically (and linguistically). These broad comparisons should deepen and advance understandings to that dimension of the African diaspora to the Americas known (fashionably) as ‘ethnogenesis’, that is, the process of becoming African-American. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]