没有值得保护的身体权利

E. Williams
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引用次数: 0

摘要

严肃地说,音乐制作中的性劳动始于20世纪20年代的经典蓝调女性,她们是全国黑人流行文化转向的缩影。格特鲁德·雷尼(Gertrude“Ma”Rainey)是她的同辈作家中最多产的一位,她的职业是详细描述黑人女性和工人阶级社区的内心生活。她的受欢迎程度证明了她作为歌手和表演者的才能,但也证明了她周围人的技巧,包括“福音布鲁斯之父”,作曲家托马斯·多尔西和他的妻子,裁缝妮蒂·多尔西。多尔西夫人和雷尼之间关系的实质体现在多尔西精心缝制的衣服上,雷尼在舞台上华丽地展示了这些衣服。除了赏心悦目之外,这些衣服还带有声音——它制造的音乐以及它的表演展示,使这件物品成为一种文本。在这次考察中,雷德蒙德揭示了存在于多尔西夫人缝制的服装和雷尼所穿的服装之间的密切关系——即虔诚的体面与工人阶级的非异性性、劳动女性气质和铿锵的声音之间的关系。多尔西夫人的作品记录了服装制作作为一种声音产品,能够促进新行业的发展,并挑战20世纪早期黑人公共领域的规范做法。对这些物品、劳动者和艺术家的微观解读揭示了当时黑人政治文化的一些细节,并突出了黑人女性性经济的互文和多媒体企业。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
No Bodily Rights Worth Protecting
The sexual labor of music making began, in earnest, with the classic Blues women of the 1920s who epitomized the turn to a national Black popular culture. Gertrude “Ma” Rainey was one of the most prolific of her cohort and made a career describing, in intimate detail, the interior lives of Black women and working class communities. Her popularity was a testament to her talents as a singer and performer but also to the skill of those around her, including the “Father of the Gospel Blues,” composer Thomas Dorsey and his wife, seamstress Nettie Dorsey. The materiality of the relationship shared between Mrs. Dorsey and Rainey is found in the dresses painstakingly sewn by Dorsey and glamorously displayed on stage by Rainey. While pleasant for the eye, these dresses also carry sounds—the music of its making as well as its performative display, making this object a text. In this examination, Redmond exposes the close proximities that exist within the costumes sewn by Mrs. Dorsey and worn by Rainey—namely the relationship between pious respectability and working-class nonheternomativity, laboring femininity and sonorous vocalities. Mrs. Dorsey’s work documents dressmaking as a sonic production capable of facilitating the growth of new industries and challenging the normative practices within the early twentieth century Black public sphere. Microreadings of these items, laborers, and artists expose some of the detail of Black political cultures in this moment and highlight the intertextual and multimedia enterprise of Black women’s sexual economies.
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