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Envisioning Black Feminist Voodoo Aesthetics - African Spirituality in American Cinema (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,091
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Envisioning Black Feminist Voodoo Aesthetics - African Spirituality in American Cinema (Paperback)
Series: Black Diasporic Worlds: Origins and Evolutions from New World Slaving
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In the twenty-first century, American popular culture increasingly
makes visible the performance of African spirituality by black
women. Disney's Princess and the Frog and Pirates of the Caribbean
franchise are two notable examples. The reliance on the black
priestess of African-derived religion as an archetype, however, has
a much longer history steeped in the colonial othering of Haitian
Vodou and American imperialist fantasies about so-called 'black
magic'. Within this cinematic study, Martin unravels how religious
autonomy impacts the identity, function, and perception of Africana
women in the American popular imagination. Martin interrogates
seventy-five years of American film representations of black women
engaged in conjure, hoodoo, obeah, or Voodoo to discern what
happens when race, gender, and African spirituality collide. She
develops the framework of Voodoo aesthetics, or the inscription of
African cosmologies on the black female body, as the theoretical
lens through which to scrutinize black female religious performance
in film. Martin places the genre of film in conversation with black
feminist/womanist criticism, offering an interdisciplinary approach
to film analysis. Positioning the black priestess as another
iteration of Patricia Hill Collins' notion of controlling images,
Martin theorizes whether film functions as a safe space for a
racial and gendered embodiment in the performance of African
diasporic religion. Approaching the close reading of eight
signature films from a black female spectatorship, Martin works
chronologically to express the trajectory of the black priestess as
cinematic motif over the last century of filmmaking. Conceptually,
Martin recalibrates the scholarship on black women and
representation by distinctly centering black women as ritual
specialists and Black Atlantic spirituality on the silver screen.
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