Oppressive Even As It Inspires: Approaching Black American Centrality in the Age of the Black European Renaissance

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q2 ETHNIC STUDIES
Laura Visser-Maessen, Jorrit Van den Berk
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In this article, we trace the evolution of the connections between Black America and (Black) Europe since the mid-twentieth century and the study thereof. We do so through the lens of ‘Black American centrality,’ referring to the ways in which perceptions of Black America serve as an outsized reference point in European understandings of race, ‘Blackness,’ and Black (European) emancipation struggles. This allows for exploring the dilemmas that the, at times overwhelming, visibility of ‘Black America’ poses to Black Europeans, particularly during the current moment of flourishing Black European culture, politics, and scholarship. In that context, we show how both U.S.- and Europe-based scholars of Black American history and Black European history have approached Black American-European connections differently. The article concludes with suggestions for how these fields can engage with each other to develop academic approaches that account for but do not privilege the position of Black Americans within diasporic exchanges in the North Atlantic region, which is currently an underexplored area in diaspora studies.

压迫性的灵感:在欧洲黑人文艺复兴时代走近美国黑人的中心地位
在本文中,我们将追溯自二十世纪中叶以来美国黑人与(黑人)欧洲之间联系的演变及其研究。我们从 "美国黑人的中心地位 "这一视角进行研究,指的是在欧洲人对种族、"黑人 "和黑人(欧洲人)解放斗争的理解中,对美国黑人的看法如何成为一个重要的参照点。这使得我们可以探讨 "美国黑人 "有时令人难以承受的可见度给欧洲黑人带来的困境,尤其是在欧洲黑人文化、政治和学术蓬勃发展的当下。在此背景下,我们展示了美国和欧洲的美国黑人历史和欧洲黑人历史学者是如何以不同的方式处理美国黑人与欧洲黑人之间的联系的。文章最后提出了一些建议,说明这些领域可以如何相互协作,以制定学术方法,说明美国黑人在北大西洋地区侨民交流中的地位,但并不因此而享有特权。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
7.70%
发文量
16
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