Black Cultural Traffic: Crossroads in Global Performance and Popular Culture

"A shrewdly designed, generously expansive, timely contribution to our understanding of how 'black' expression continues to define and defy the contours of global (post)modernity. The essays argue persuasively for a transnational ethos binding disparate African and diasporic enactments, and together provide a robust conversation about the nature, history, future, and even possibility of 'blackness' as a distinctive mode of cultural practice."
--Kimberly Benston, author of Performing Blackness

"Black Cultural Traffic is nothing less than our generation's manifesto on black performance and popular culture. With a distinguished roster of contributors and topics ranging across academic disciplines and the arts (including commentary on film, music, literature, theater, television, and visual cultures), this volume is not only required reading for scholars serious about the various dimensions of black performance, it is also a timely and necessary teaching tool. It captures the excitement and intellectual innovation of a field that has come of age. Kudos!"
--Dwight A. McBride, author of Why I Hate Abercrombie & Fitch

"The explosion of interest in black popular culture studies in the past fifteen years has left a significant need for a reader that reflects this new scholarly energy. Black Cultural Traffic answers that need."
--Mark Anthony Neal, author of Songs in the Key of Black Life

"A revolutionary anthology that will be widely read and taught. It crisscrosses continents and cultures and examines confluences and influences of black popular culture -- music, dance, theatre, television, fashion and film. It also adds a new dimension to current discussions of racial, ethnic, and national identity."
--Horace Porter, author of The Making of a Black Scholar
1113106192
Black Cultural Traffic: Crossroads in Global Performance and Popular Culture

"A shrewdly designed, generously expansive, timely contribution to our understanding of how 'black' expression continues to define and defy the contours of global (post)modernity. The essays argue persuasively for a transnational ethos binding disparate African and diasporic enactments, and together provide a robust conversation about the nature, history, future, and even possibility of 'blackness' as a distinctive mode of cultural practice."
--Kimberly Benston, author of Performing Blackness

"Black Cultural Traffic is nothing less than our generation's manifesto on black performance and popular culture. With a distinguished roster of contributors and topics ranging across academic disciplines and the arts (including commentary on film, music, literature, theater, television, and visual cultures), this volume is not only required reading for scholars serious about the various dimensions of black performance, it is also a timely and necessary teaching tool. It captures the excitement and intellectual innovation of a field that has come of age. Kudos!"
--Dwight A. McBride, author of Why I Hate Abercrombie & Fitch

"The explosion of interest in black popular culture studies in the past fifteen years has left a significant need for a reader that reflects this new scholarly energy. Black Cultural Traffic answers that need."
--Mark Anthony Neal, author of Songs in the Key of Black Life

"A revolutionary anthology that will be widely read and taught. It crisscrosses continents and cultures and examines confluences and influences of black popular culture -- music, dance, theatre, television, fashion and film. It also adds a new dimension to current discussions of racial, ethnic, and national identity."
--Horace Porter, author of The Making of a Black Scholar
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Black Cultural Traffic: Crossroads in Global Performance and Popular Culture

Black Cultural Traffic: Crossroads in Global Performance and Popular Culture

Black Cultural Traffic: Crossroads in Global Performance and Popular Culture

Black Cultural Traffic: Crossroads in Global Performance and Popular Culture

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Overview


"A shrewdly designed, generously expansive, timely contribution to our understanding of how 'black' expression continues to define and defy the contours of global (post)modernity. The essays argue persuasively for a transnational ethos binding disparate African and diasporic enactments, and together provide a robust conversation about the nature, history, future, and even possibility of 'blackness' as a distinctive mode of cultural practice."
--Kimberly Benston, author of Performing Blackness

"Black Cultural Traffic is nothing less than our generation's manifesto on black performance and popular culture. With a distinguished roster of contributors and topics ranging across academic disciplines and the arts (including commentary on film, music, literature, theater, television, and visual cultures), this volume is not only required reading for scholars serious about the various dimensions of black performance, it is also a timely and necessary teaching tool. It captures the excitement and intellectual innovation of a field that has come of age. Kudos!"
--Dwight A. McBride, author of Why I Hate Abercrombie & Fitch

"The explosion of interest in black popular culture studies in the past fifteen years has left a significant need for a reader that reflects this new scholarly energy. Black Cultural Traffic answers that need."
--Mark Anthony Neal, author of Songs in the Key of Black Life

"A revolutionary anthology that will be widely read and taught. It crisscrosses continents and cultures and examines confluences and influences of black popular culture -- music, dance, theatre, television, fashion and film. It also adds a new dimension to current discussions of racial, ethnic, and national identity."
--Horace Porter, author of The Making of a Black Scholar

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780472025459
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Publication date: 02/11/2010
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 416
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Harry J. Elam, Jr. , is Olive H. Palmer Professor in Humanities and Professor of Drama at Stanford University. He is author of The Past as Present in the Drama of August Wilson and Taking It to the Streets: The Social Protest Theater of Luis Valdez and Amiri Baraka.

Kennell Jackson is Associate Professor of History at Stanford, and author of America Is Me: 170 Fresh Questions and Answers on Black American History.

Table of Contents

\rrhp\ \lrrh: Contents\ \1h\ Contents \xt\ \comp: add page numbers on page proofs\ Twenty Questions Donald Byrd Introduction: Traveling While Black Kennell Jackson Part 1 Crossroads and Intersections in Black Performance and Black Popular Culture When Is African Theater "Black"? Catherine M. Cole Performing Blackness Down Under: Gospel Music in Australia E. Patrick Johnson Passing and the Problematic of Multiracial Pride (or, Why One Mixed Girl Still Answers to Black) Danzy Senna The Shadows of Texts: Will Black Music and Singers Sell Everything on Television? Kennell Jackson Part 2 Stop Signs and Signposts: Stabilities and Instabilities in Black Performance and Black Popular Culture Optic Black: Naturalizing the Refusal to Fit W. T. Lhamon, Jr. Diaspora Aesthetics and Visual Culture Kobena Mercer Keeping It Real: Disidentification and Its Discontents Tim'm T. West Faking the Funk? Mariah Carey, Alicia Keys, and (Hybrid) Black Celebrity Caroline A. Streeter Interlude: Black Artists on Issues of Culture and Performance Part 3 International Congestion: Globalization, Dispersions, and Black Cultural Travel Black Community, Black Spectacle: Performance and Race in Transatlantic Perspective Tyler Stovall The 1960s in Bamako: Malick Sidibé and James Brown Manthia Diawara Global Hip-Hop and the African Diaspora Halifu Osumare Continental Riffs: Praisesingers in Transnational Contexts Paulla A. Ebron Part 4 Trafficking in Black Visual Images: Television, Film, and New Media Where Have All the Black Shows Gone? Herman Gray Hip-Hop Fashion, Masculine Anxiety, and the Discourse of Americana Nicole R. Fleetwood Spike Lee's Bamboozled Harry J. Elam, Jr. Moving Violations: Performing Globalization and Feminism in Set It Off Jennifer Devere Brody Change Clothes and Go: A Postscript to Postblackness Harry J. Elam, Jr. Contributors
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