Memorializing Masculinity?

L. McGinnis
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The Black Lives Matter movement has delivered a timely reminder of the colonial narratives underpinning commemorative statuary in the public sphere. Crucial to this renewed scrutiny of public memorialization is a consideration of the intersection of political and historical narratives with systems of oppression such as gender and race. This essay explores the gendering of colonial and anticolonial commemorative statuary on display in the French Caribbean islands of Martinique and Guadeloupe. As overseas departments of France, these islands remain politically, administratively and economically tied to their former colonizer. The essay traces the evolution in Antillean memorialization from the glorification of the white male colonizer or abolitionist to the celebration of slave resistance through the figure of the maroon. It examines a range of public artworks dating from 1904 to 2002, questioning the extent to which these memorials, whether commemorating colonial history, abolitionist rhetoric or anticolonial resistance, uphold “great men of history” narratives. The essay explores the subversion of classical representations of colonial and abolitionist figures through the vandalism and destruction of a number of statues of abolitionist Victor Schoelcher. It examines the masculine iconography of resistance, often premised on the radical appropriation of classicist forms to celebrate male resistors, while women and their roles in anticolonial struggle are commonly obscured or depicted in ways which uphold dominant racial narratives and gender stereotypes. Finally, the essay explores the subversive anticolonial forms employed in several recent installations, which move beyond mimetic depictions of the male body to showcase elements usually excluded from representation, including the grotesque, disfigured or wounded body, or to eschew portrayals of the (gendered and racialized) body altogether. These works point to more inclusive ways of portraying not only resistance to colonialism, but also the suffering and the collective humanity of enslaved peoples.
纪念男子气概吗?
“黑人的命也是命”运动及时地提醒人们,公共领域的纪念雕像是由殖民叙事支撑的。重新审视公众纪念活动的关键是考虑政治和历史叙事与性别和种族等压迫制度的交集。本文探讨了法属加勒比马提尼克岛和瓜德罗普岛展出的殖民和反殖民纪念雕像的性别问题。作为法国的海外部门,这些岛屿在政治上、行政上和经济上仍然与前殖民者联系在一起。本文追溯了安的列斯群岛纪念活动的演变,从颂扬白人男性殖民者或废奴主义者,到通过栗色人种的形象来庆祝奴隶的反抗。它考察了从1904年到2002年的一系列公共艺术作品,质疑这些纪念殖民历史、废奴主义言论或反殖民抵抗的纪念碑在多大程度上坚持了“历史伟人”的叙事。本文通过对废奴主义者维克多·舍尔彻(Victor Schoelcher)雕像的破坏和破坏,探讨了对殖民地和废奴主义者形象的经典再现的颠覆。它考察了抵抗运动的男性形象,通常以激进地挪用古典主义形式来庆祝男性抵抗运动为前提,而女性及其在反殖民斗争中的角色通常被模糊化,或者以维护主流种族叙事和性别刻板印象的方式被描绘出来。最后,本文探讨了最近几个装置中采用的颠覆性反殖民形式,这些装置超越了对男性身体的模仿描绘,展示了通常被排除在表现之外的元素,包括怪诞、毁容或受伤的身体,或者完全避免了对(性别和种族化的)身体的描绘。这些作品不仅以更具包容性的方式描绘对殖民主义的抵抗,而且还描绘了被奴役人民的苦难和集体人性。
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
Molecular interventions
Molecular interventions 生物-生化与分子生物学
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