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The image of the Caribbean figure has been reconfigured by
photography from the mid-19th century onwards. Initial images
associated with the slave and indentured worker from the locations
and legacies associated with plantation economies have been usurped
by visual representations emerging from struggles for social,
political and cultural autonomy. Contemporary visual artists
engaging with the Caribbean as a 21st century globalised space have
focused on visually re-imagining historical material and events as
memories, histories and dreamscapes. Creole in the Archive uses
photographic analysis to explore portraits, postcards and social
documentation of the colonial worker between 1850 and 1960 and
contemporary, often digital, visual art by post-independent,
postcolonial Caribbean artists. Drawing on Derridean ideas of the
archive, the book reconceptualises the Caribbean visual archive as
contiguous and relational. It argues that using a creolising
archive practice, the conjuncture of contemporary artworks,
historical imagery and associated locations can develop insightful
new multimodal representations of Caribbean subjectivities.
The image of the Caribbean figure has been reconfigured by
photography from the mid-19th century onwards. Initial images
associated with the slave and indentured worker from the locations
and legacies associated with plantation economies have been usurped
by visual representations emerging from struggles for social,
political and cultural autonomy. Contemporary visual artists
engaging with the Caribbean as a 21st century globalised space have
focused on visually re-imagining historical material and events as
memories, histories and dreamscapes. Creole in the Archive uses
photographic analysis to explore portraits, postcards and social
documentation of the colonial worker between 1850 and 1960 and
contemporary, often digital, visual art by post-independent,
postcolonial Caribbean artists. Drawing on Derridean ideas of the
archive, the book reconceptualises the Caribbean visual archive as
contiguous and relational. It argues that using a creolising
archive practice, the conjuncture of contemporary artworks,
historical imagery and associated locations can develop insightful
new multimodal representations of Caribbean subjectivities.
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