跨大西洋黑人歌剧中的黑人解放政治与泥潭

I. Mhlambi
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摘要

殖民主义、奴隶制和新自由主义的遗产,以及黑人解放政治的后遗症,暴露了黑人政治区域化的缺陷和为之奋斗的自由的局限性。在他们试图与这些现实作斗争的过程中,散居的非洲社区无意中破坏了黑人在跨国黑人团结和泛非主义精神下的团结。我认为,新自由主义资本主义和黑人解放话语的矛盾导致了黑人身份的产生,他们的观点否定了曾经将黑人种族束缚在社会和经济正义共同目标周围的价值观。本文以菲利斯·塔瓦(Phyllis Taoua)的“未被解放的自由”概念为基础,运用三部关于奴隶制、移民和人口贩卖的黑人歌剧来探讨黑人解放话语的矛盾之处。我展示了托妮·莫里森和理查德·丹尼尔普尔的《玛格丽特·加纳》(2005年在美国首演)、雪莉·汤普森的《拒绝跳舞的女人》(2007年在英国首演)中的奴隶制和人口贩卖,曼德拉·兰加和休·马塞克拉的《里程碑》(1999年在南非首演)通过承认我们黑人处境的独特性和不同黑人背景下黑人状况的独特性,指出了黑人团结理论化的新方法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Black liberation politics and quagmires in trans-Atlantic black operas
Abstract Legacies of colonialism, slavery, and neo-liberalism, as well as the afterlives of black liberatory politics, are laying bare shortcomings of the regionalization of black politics and the limits of the freedoms fought for. In their attempts to grapple with these realities, diasporan African communities inadvertently fractured black solidarity espoused in the ethos of transnational black unity and pan-Africanism. I argue that neoliberal capitalism and contradictions of black liberatory discourses have given rise to black identities whose outlook disavo ws values that once bound the black race around common goals of social and economic justice. Drawing from Phyllis Taoua’s notion of “unfreed freedoms,” this article uses three black operas about slavery, migration, and human trafficking to explore contradictions of the afterlives of black liberatory discourses. I show that slavery and human trafficking in Toni Morrison and Richard Danielpour’s Margaret Garner (premiered in the United States in 2005), Shirley Thompson’s The Woman Who Refused to Dance (premiered in the United Kingdom in 2007), and Mandla Langa and Hugh Masekela’s Milestones (premiered in South Africa in 1999) point to renewed ways of theorizing black solidarity by acknowledging the singularities of our black situatedness and the peculiarities of the black condition in different black contexts.
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