Singing Blackness across Borders. Capeyuye and Mascogo Identity in Northern Mexico [abstract only]

dc.contributor.authorMadrid, Alejandro L.
dc.date.accessioned2013-05-01T19:44:46Z
dc.date.available2013-05-01T19:44:46Z
dc.date.issued2011-10
dc.description.abstractThis paper takes capeyuye [spiritual singing] as a point of departure to study the Mascogos’ continuous struggle to define themselves as binational people, as Afro- Seminoles living in Coahuila, Mexico. By reflecting on the intersections of race, nationality, and the body within the specificities of Mascogo border culture and history, the paper problematizes Anne Anlin Cheng’s notion of “racial melancholia,” suggesting that self rejection might be a more strategic move than she acknowledges to be. In the end, the author coins the term “dialectical soundings” and propose that the singing of spirituals among the Mascogos in fact renders Blackness visible in the context of the Mexican border essentialist racial discourses.en
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2022/15522
dc.language.isoen_USen
dc.publisherLatin American Music Centeren
dc.subjectCulturalen
dc.subjectConferenciaen
dc.subjectCultural Counterpointsen
dc.subjectInteractionsen
dc.subjectLatin Americaen
dc.subjectLatin American Music Centeren
dc.subjectMusicen
dc.subjectMusicalen
dc.subjectMúsicaen
dc.subjectMúsica Latinoamericanaen
dc.subjectUnited Statesen
dc.subjectFiftieth Anniversaryen
dc.subject50th anniversaryen
dc.subjectCapeyuyeen
dc.subjectMascogoen
dc.subjectNorthern Mexicoen
dc.subjectMexicoen
dc.titleSinging Blackness across Borders. Capeyuye and Mascogo Identity in Northern Mexico [abstract only]en
dc.typeArticleen

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