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Black Gold: A Black Feminist Art History of 1920s Montréal

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Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteur/contributeur
  • Joachim, Joana (Auteur)
Titre
Black Gold: A Black Feminist Art History of 1920s Montréal
Résumé
The 1920s have been touted as the golden era of jazz and Black history in Montréal. Similarly, the decade is well known for the Harlem Renaissance, a key moment in African American art history. Yet this period in Black Canadian art histories remains largely unknown. As a first step toward shedding some light on this period in Black Canadian art history, I propose to use what I term a Black feminist art-historical (bfah) praxis to discuss some visual art practices undoubtedly active alongside well-known jazz musicians and cultural producers in 1920s Montréal. This paper presents an overview of critical race art history and feminist art history, as well as Black feminist approaches to visual representation, to outline what might be considered four tenets of bfah praxis. Applying these tenets, I propose that a new art history may emerge from well-known art objects and practices as well as lesser-known ones. I posit that through a deliberately bfah approach, new meanings emerge and the voices of Black women, even when obstructed by mainstream white narratives, may begin to stand out and shed light upon a variety of histories. This praxis aims to underline the subtext lurking at the edges of these images and to make intangible presences visible in the archive and in art history. I propose bfah as a strategy for more nuanced discussion of the work of Black Canadian artists and histories that have by and large been left out of official records.
Publication
Canadian Journal of History
Volume
56
Numéro
3
Pages
266-291
Date
2021
DOI
10.3138/cjh.56-3-2021-0017
ISSN
0008-4107
Titre abrégé
Black Gold
URL
https://www.utpjournals.press/doi/abs/10.3138/cjh.56-3-2021-0017
Catalogue de bibl.
utpjournals.press (Atypon)
Extra
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Référence
Joachim, J. (2021). Black Gold: A Black Feminist Art History of 1920s Montréal. Canadian Journal of History, 56(3), 266–291. https://doi.org/10.3138/cjh.56-3-2021-0017
Enjeux
  • Création et composition
  • Légitimité culturelle
Genres musicaux
  • Comédies musicales/vaudeville/opérette/variétés
  • Jazz
Identités
  • Femmes*
  • Racialisation
Lien vers cette notice
https://bibliographies.uqam.ca/bibliodig/bibliographie/PNF5CCJS
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