Abstract
The 1960s witnessed among African Americans a wholesale rejection of white power, including the repertoire and iconography of blackface performance. And yet, surprisingly, one finds among some of the most revolutionary Afrocentric artists, critics, and activists of the time a complex, nuanced, even contradictory attitude towards “blacking up.”
Issue Section:
Routes of Blackface
This content is only available as a PDF.
©2013 New York University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
2013
You do not currently have access to this content.