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Styling Blackness in Chile
Music and Dance in the African Diaspora
Published by: Indiana University Press
252 Pages, 25 b&w illus.
- eBook
- 9780253041173
- Published: April 2019
$18.99
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Chile had long forgotten about the existence of the country's Black population when, in 2003, the music and dance called the tumbe carnaval appeared on the streets of the city of Arica. Featuring turbaned dancers accompanied by a lively rhythm played on hide-head drums, the tumbe resonated with cosmopolitan images of what the African Diaspora looks like, and so helped bring attention to a community seeking legal recognition from the Chilean government which denied its existence.
Tumbe carnaval, however, was not the only type of music and dance that Afro-Chileans have participated in and identified with over the years. In Styling Blackness in Chile, Juan Eduardo Wolf explores the multiple ways that Black individuals in Arica have performed music and dance to frame their Blackness in relationship to other groups of performers—a process he calls styling. Combining ethnography and semiotic analysis, Wolf illustrates how styling Blackness as Criollo, Moreno, and Indígena through genres like the baile de tierra, morenos de paso, and caporales simultaneously offered individuals alternative ways of identifying and contributed to the invisibility of Afro-descendants in Chilean society. While the styling of the tumbe as Afro-descendant helped make Chile's Black community visible once again, Wolf also notes that its success raises issues of representation as more people begin to perform the genre in ways that resonate less with local cultural memory and Afro-Chilean activists' goals. At a moment when Chile's government continues to discuss whether to recognize the Afro-Chilean population and Chilean society struggles to come to terms with an increase in Latin American Afro-descendant immigrants, Wolf's book raises awareness of Blackness in Chile and the variety of Black music-dance throughout the African Diaspora, while also providing tools that ethnomusicologists and other scholars of expressive culture can use to study the role of music-dance in other cultural contexts.
Acknowledgements
Accessing Audiovisual Materials
Introduction: Of Stereotypes and Styling
Part I: Styling Blackness as Afro-descendant
1. The Disappearance of Blackness and the Emergence of Afro-descendants in Chile
2. Tumbe Carnaval: Styling Afro-descendant
3. Self-Understanding as Motivation for Styling Afro-descendant
Part II: Other Ways of Styling Blackness
An Interlude on the Importance of Styling Blackness and the African Diaspora
4. Styling Blackness as Criollo: Dancing the Intimate
5. Styling Moreno: Taking Pride in Decent Steps
6. Styling Blackness as Indígena: Racial Order as Carnivalesque?
7. A Question of Success: Carnivalization and the Future of Styling
Bibliography
Index
Juan Eduardo Wolf is Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology at the School of Music and Dance of the University of Oregon. He also serves as a core faculty member in the university's Folklore and Public Culture Program.
"Wolf's work is exemplary as he critically addresses twenty-first-century deliberations on identity and cultural diversity across the African diaspora."
~Yvonne Daniel, Smith College, Journal of American Folklore
"Wolf 's text is a solid contribution to current narratives of self-determination and positioning of Chile's Afro-descendant population. The book highlights the achievements that music and dance represent for social and cultural processes in Chile, which makes it useful to understanding other Afro-American narratives across the Americas."
~Fernando Palacios Mateos, Ethnomusicology
"The book itself will not only prove useful for academics interested in the music of Chile, Latin America, the African Diaspora, Blackness, and in semiotics, but is also written in a style that is accessible to upper-level undergraduates and above"
~P. Judkins Wellington - City University of New York, Journal of Folklore Research