Playing with Origins: Racial Self‐Making and Embodying History in Togolese Capoeira

IF 1.6 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Celina de Sá
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article discusses how contemporary expressive cultural projects in Lomé, Togo, highlight practices of racial self‐making emerging from urban African contexts through a martial art developed by enslaved Afro‐Brazilians in colonial Brazil. This specific case analyzes Nukunu, the country's first capoeira group, and their ideological constructions of self, people, and historical time. Through capoeira—as a practice that I suggest makes interventions into these three spheres—Togolese martial artists creatively leverage the historical ties across the Black Atlantic as ideological and embodied resources for facing the particular challenges of twenty‐first‐century neocolonial structures. By analyzing Nukunu's views on their own racial subjectivity as an extended history of racial oppression, as well as a reenactment of the Ewe ethnic group's origin story, I argue that Togolese martial artists radically reframe notions of self, peoplehood, and historical time through enacting and performing racialized diasporic forms.
玩起源:多哥卡波埃拉的种族自我创造和体现历史
本文讨论了多哥lomoise的当代表现性文化项目如何通过巴西殖民地被奴役的非洲裔巴西人发展的武术,突出了非洲城市背景下种族自我创造的实践。这个具体案例分析了Nukunu,这个国家的第一个卡波耶拉群体,以及他们对自我、人民和历史时间的意识形态建构。通过卡波埃拉,作为一种实践,我建议对这三个领域进行干预,多哥武术艺术家创造性地利用了跨黑大西洋的历史联系,作为面对21世纪新殖民主义结构的特殊挑战的意识形态和具体资源。通过分析努库努将自己的种族主体性作为种族压迫的延伸历史的观点,以及对Ewe族群起源故事的重演,我认为多哥武术家通过制定和表演种族化的流散形式,从根本上重新构建了自我、民族和历史时间的概念。
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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CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
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