Selling Black Brazil: Race, Nation, and Visual Culture in Salvador, Bahia
2023 Honorable Mention, Brazil Section Humanities Book Prize, Latin American Studies Association (LASA) This book explores visual portrayals of blackness in Brazil to reveal the integral role of visual culture in crafting race and nation across Latin America. In the early twentieth century, Brazil s...
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | 2023 Honorable Mention, Brazil Section Humanities Book
Prize, Latin American Studies Association (LASA)
This book explores visual portrayals of blackness in Brazil
to reveal the integral role of visual culture in crafting race and
nation across Latin America. In the early twentieth
century, Brazil shifted from a nation intent on whitening its
population to one billing itself as a racial democracy. Anadelia
Romo shows that this shift centered in Salvador, Bahia, where
throughout the 1950s, modernist artists and intellectuals forged
critical alliances with Afro-Brazilian religious communities of
Candomblé to promote their culture and their city. These efforts
combined with a growing promotion of tourism to transform what had
been one of the busiest slaving depots in the Americas into a
popular tourist enclave celebrated for its rich Afro-Brazilian
culture. Vibrant illustrations and texts by the likes of Jorge
Amado, Pierre Verger, and others contributed to a distinctive
iconography of the city, with Afro-Bahians at its center. But these
optimistic visions of inclusion, Romo reveals, concealed deep
racial inequalities. Illustrating how these visual archetypes laid
the foundation for Salvador's modern racial landscape, this book
unveils the ways ethnic and racial populations have been both
included and excluded not only in Brazil but in Latin America as a
whole. |
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DOI: | 10.7560/324196 |