In Listening for Africa
David F. Garcia explores how a diverse group of musicians, dancers,
academics, and activists engaged with the idea of black music and
dance’s African origins between the 1930s and 1950s. Garcia examines the
work of figures ranging from Melville J. Herskovits, Katherine Dunham,
and Asadata Dafora to Duke Ellington, Dámaso Pérez Prado, and others who
believed that linking black music and dance with Africa and nature
would help realize modernity’s promises of freedom in the face of
fascism and racism in Europe and the Americas, colonialism in Africa,
and the nuclear threat at the start of the Cold War. In analyzing their
work, Garcia traces how such attempts to link black music and dance to
Africa unintentionally reinforced the binary relationships between the
West and Africa, white and black, the modern and the primitive, science
and magic, and rural and urban. It was, Garcia demonstrates, modernity’s
determinations of unraced, heteronormative, and productive bodies, and
of scientific truth that helped defer the realization of individual and
political freedom in the world.
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