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Afrocubanismo

Afrocubanismo was an artistic and social movement in black-themed Cuban culture with origins in the 1920s, as in works by the cultural anthropologist Fernando Ortiz. The Afrocubanismo movement focused on establishing the legitimacy of black identity in Cuban society, culture, and art. The movement developed in the interwar period when white intellectuals in Cuba acknowledged openly the significance of African culture in Cuba.[1][2][3] Afro-Cuban artistic expressions helped integrate the marginalized black community into mainstream Cuban society and art. Since its inception, Afro-Cuban Humanities has emerged as a major area of collegiate studies, and Afrocubanismo's influences can be seen in Cuban literature, painting, music, theater, and sculpture.

Background edit

Racial dynamics between black and white Cubans had been tense in the decades leading up to the movement's inception in the early 20th century. Slavery in Cuba was abolished in October 1886.[4] Prior to the movement, the Afro-Cuban population struggled with fragmentation and an unbalanced social hierarchy. The Afro-Cuban population consisted of working slaves, freed slaves, and a small number of black middle-class elites and intellectuals.[4] The disparities within the black community were exacerbated by the systematic mistreatment and racist policies inflicted upon them by White Cubans.

In the 1912 Race War (guerrita del doce), civil war erupted between Afro-Cuban farmers and protesters versus Cuban armed forces and White militias.[4] Conflict broke out after Afro-Cuban protesters attempted to stage uprisings out of frustration due to failed protests to stop a law prohibiting black political parties. The end result was the death of an estimated 2,000 to 6,000 Afro-Cuban farmers and workers.[4][5]

Even after abolition, Afro-Cubans were barred from higher education, white-collar professions, government positions, bars, restaurants, clubs, and given restricted access to public spaces like parks and recreation areas.[5] Afro-Cuban frustration was further worsened by the fact that many had anticipated inclusion and progressive change after Cuba’s War of Independence against Spain, where the majority of Cuba’s armed forces consisted of black and mixed-race soldiers, many of whom were slaves and former slaves.[5] In spite of their efforts in the War of Independence, Afro-Cubans were outraged at the failure of Cuban legislature to enact policies that would benefit the black population. It wasn't until the establishment of universal male suffrage that White Cubans had to acknowledge the value of the Afro-Cuban citizen, since the black population now made up 30 percent of Cuba’s total voting population.[4]

In addition to the political and economic hostilities between the two racial groups, White Cuban attitudes towards Black and African culture were bitter and hostile. Many White Cuban authors held contempt for African customs and traditions. Fernando Ortiz, the founder and advocate of Afro-Cuban studies, described African art and cultural practices in his earlier writings as “infantile,” “barbaric,” “primitive,” “savage,” and “repugnant.”[5] White Cuban nationalists described African expression as an infection that was invading Cuban culture.

Origin of Afrocubanismo edit

Although thought of mainly as a black phenomenon, the roots of Afrocubanismo originated from White Cuban interests. Afrocubanismo was first developed by formally trained White Cuban elites, not Afro-Cubans.[6] White Afrocubanista art typically depicted black subjects using highly stylized forms.[4] White Cubans appropriated the aesthetics of African art and altered them using Euro-centric techniques and philosophies of aesthetic beauty. White Afrocubanistas were not concerned with accurately portraying Afro-Cuban life or customs. Rather, these Euro-Cubans sought to make traditional elements of African art more palatable for mainstream Cuban society. In an essay entitled "Uniting Blacks in a raceless nation," author Arnedo-Gomez describes this cultural appropriation by White Cubans explaining, “...the movement accommodated and folklorised Afro-Cuban... forms in order to make them acceptable within the dominant European-derived tradition...”[5]

Afro-Cuban responses to White Afrocubanista art were conflicted and ranging. Some members of the black middle class opposed the white portrayals of black identity and culture, finding them racist and derogatory.[6] Some members of the black middle class found merit in the Euro-centric interpretations of African culture. In fact, many Afro-Cuban intellectuals embraced some of the more problematic and questionable elements of the underlying white nationalist beliefs brought to Afrocubanismo by White elitists.[6] Still other Afro-Cubans found that Afrocubanista art, in spite of racist depictions, opened opportunities for Black Cuban art forms to become part of the Cuban cultural sphere. All of these factors contributed to what Arnedo-Gomez calls the “reformulation” of Afrocubanismo. According to Gomez, Afro-Cubans repurposed Afrocubanista art to move away from the stereotypical portrayals that White Afrocubanista artists depicted.[4] Black middle class and working class Afro-Cubans contributed their own influences. “Afrocubanismo was... 'an ideological and cultural product that was neither stable, nor coherent' and... open to divergent interpretations.”

Major Themes edit

While rooted in White ideologies and problematic conceptualizations of African culture, the Afro-Cuban perspective on the themes of the movement were more concerned with social justice, equality, and questioning of the status quo.[6] The purposes behind Afrocubanismo’s various expressions were different. For some White Cubans, the significance of Afro-Cubanismo was the revalorization of African art as an expression of Cuban identity. Some scholars, like Fernando Ortiz, advocated that Afrocubanismo and African derived art forms were important for the anthropological pursuit of acknowledging the history behind Cuban identity in all forms.[5] These White Afrocubanistas idealized the concept of a "raceless" Cuba where all its citizens shared a single national identity. The problem for Afro-Cubans with this idealized view of Afrocubanismo and race was that it trivialized the experiences of blacks in Cuba and ignored the serious systemic racial issues underpinning Cuban interracial relations. “...Ortiz can be cited from the mid-1930s onwards referring to Afrocuban arts as "an abandoned [cultural] treasure," something of value to be carefully studied and protected, and is in vocal in his support of the analysis of all forms of Afrocuban music and literature.”[5] Even in his notably racist earlier works that attack African customs, Ortiz inadvertently captured the depth, complexity, and richness of African cultural practices and expression. “...Ortiz even in this earliest study provide[d] detailed descriptions of African-derived deities, their personalities, their iconic representations, the altars and shrines devoted to them, the religious ritual associated with their worship, and the songs and dances incorporated into such worship. Indeed, the majority of Ortiz's study mutely testifies to the complexity and poetic cohesiveness of the religious beliefs which he condemns as savage and dangerous.” [5]

Black Afrocubanistas were less focused on describing and idealizing African art and more concerned with capturing the reality of African life. The poetry of Nicholas Guillen, an Afro-Cuban poet, celebrates black street culture and music.[4] Afro-Cuban literature of the 1930s was often political and served as a form of protest and criticism of the dominant White nationalism of Cuba. Afro-Cuban visual arts too served as a statement against the homogeneity of White Cuban culture.[4] Many black Afrocubanista artists used their art to counter the ideals of equality and the perceived unity among blacks and whites that White Cubans claimed existed. Afro-Cuban art served to question the ideologies of White Cubans. "…Guillen’s poetry celebrated black street culture and Arozarena and Pedroso ‘chant to workers and the dispossessed and criticise what Arozarena described as the bourgeois conception of Afro-Cuban culture’.[4]

Some Afro-Cuban poets and artists actually rejected the term “Afro-Cuban” and its use as a classifying term for African-derived art. Nicholas Guillen and Arredondo, two black Afrocubanismo authors, rejected the term because it felt constructed, it separated between categories of black Cuban and white Cuban, and it made the goal of a single unified mulatto Cuban identity impossible. In this sense, themes of Afrocubanismo also include this type of anti-Afro-Cuban perspectives held by some black intellectuals. Afro-Cuban literature was often written to express criticism over the prevalent racism and glossing over of social issues of racial inequality.

Major Artists edit

  • Fernando Ortiz: A White Cuban author and advocate of Afrocuban studies.
  • Nicholas Guillen: an Afro-Cuban poet
  • Alberto Pena: Afrocuban painter
  • Teodoro Ramos Blanco: Afro-Cuban sculptor
  • Andres Alvarez Naranjo: Afro-Cuban sculptor
  • Angel Pinto: Afro-Cuban author and critic

References edit

  1. ^ Ortiz, Fernando 1950. La Afrocania de la musica folklorica de Cuba. La Habana, revised ed 1965
  2. ^ Ortiz, Fernando 1951. Los bailes y el teatro de los negros en el folklore de Cuba. Letras Cubanas, La Habana. Continuation of the previous book; contains transcriptions of percussion in notation and lyrics of toques and cantos a los santos variously in Lucumi and Spanish.
  3. ^ Carpentier, Alejo 2001 [1946]. Music in Cuba, edited and with an introduction by Timothy Brennan, translated by Alan West-Durán. Cultural Studies of the Americas 5 (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press).[page needed] ISBN 0-8166-3229-4 (hardcover); ISBN 0-8166-3230-8 (pbk.) First published as La música en cuba (México: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1946). Second edition under the same title, Colección popular 109 (México: Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1984). ISBN 968-16-0250-1 (pbk.). Third edition, Giraldilla series (Havana: Editorial Letras Cubanas, 1988). A standard work on the history of Cuban music up to 1940.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Arnedo-Gomez, Miguel (April 2012). "Uniting blacks in a raceless nation: Afro-Cuban reformulations of Afrocubanismo and mestizaje in 1930s Cuba". Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies. 18: 33–59. doi:10.1080/14701847.2012.716644. S2CID 144275676.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Moore, Robin D. (Summer 1994). "Representations of Afrocuban Expressive Culture in the Writings of Fernando Ortiz". Latin American Music Review. 15 (1): 32–54. doi:10.2307/3085947. JSTOR 3085947.
  6. ^ a b c d Moore, Robin (2006). Encyclopedia of African-American Culture and History. Farmington Hills, Michigan: Gale - Cage Learning. pp. 1–5.

afrocubanismo, artistic, social, movement, black, themed, cuban, culture, with, origins, 1920s, works, cultural, anthropologist, fernando, ortiz, movement, focused, establishing, legitimacy, black, identity, cuban, society, culture, movement, developed, interw. Afrocubanismo was an artistic and social movement in black themed Cuban culture with origins in the 1920s as in works by the cultural anthropologist Fernando Ortiz The Afrocubanismo movement focused on establishing the legitimacy of black identity in Cuban society culture and art The movement developed in the interwar period when white intellectuals in Cuba acknowledged openly the significance of African culture in Cuba 1 2 3 Afro Cuban artistic expressions helped integrate the marginalized black community into mainstream Cuban society and art Since its inception Afro Cuban Humanities has emerged as a major area of collegiate studies and Afrocubanismo s influences can be seen in Cuban literature painting music theater and sculpture Contents 1 Background 2 Origin of Afrocubanismo 3 Major Themes 4 Major Artists 5 ReferencesBackground editRacial dynamics between black and white Cubans had been tense in the decades leading up to the movement s inception in the early 20th century Slavery in Cuba was abolished in October 1886 4 Prior to the movement the Afro Cuban population struggled with fragmentation and an unbalanced social hierarchy The Afro Cuban population consisted of working slaves freed slaves and a small number of black middle class elites and intellectuals 4 The disparities within the black community were exacerbated by the systematic mistreatment and racist policies inflicted upon them by White Cubans In the 1912 Race War guerrita del doce civil war erupted between Afro Cuban farmers and protesters versus Cuban armed forces and White militias 4 Conflict broke out after Afro Cuban protesters attempted to stage uprisings out of frustration due to failed protests to stop a law prohibiting black political parties The end result was the death of an estimated 2 000 to 6 000 Afro Cuban farmers and workers 4 5 Even after abolition Afro Cubans were barred from higher education white collar professions government positions bars restaurants clubs and given restricted access to public spaces like parks and recreation areas 5 Afro Cuban frustration was further worsened by the fact that many had anticipated inclusion and progressive change after Cuba s War of Independence against Spain where the majority of Cuba s armed forces consisted of black and mixed race soldiers many of whom were slaves and former slaves 5 In spite of their efforts in the War of Independence Afro Cubans were outraged at the failure of Cuban legislature to enact policies that would benefit the black population It wasn t until the establishment of universal male suffrage that White Cubans had to acknowledge the value of the Afro Cuban citizen since the black population now made up 30 percent of Cuba s total voting population 4 In addition to the political and economic hostilities between the two racial groups White Cuban attitudes towards Black and African culture were bitter and hostile Many White Cuban authors held contempt for African customs and traditions Fernando Ortiz the founder and advocate of Afro Cuban studies described African art and cultural practices in his earlier writings as infantile barbaric primitive savage and repugnant 5 White Cuban nationalists described African expression as an infection that was invading Cuban culture Origin of Afrocubanismo editAlthough thought of mainly as a black phenomenon the roots of Afrocubanismo originated from White Cuban interests Afrocubanismo was first developed by formally trained White Cuban elites not Afro Cubans 6 White Afrocubanista art typically depicted black subjects using highly stylized forms 4 White Cubans appropriated the aesthetics of African art and altered them using Euro centric techniques and philosophies of aesthetic beauty White Afrocubanistas were not concerned with accurately portraying Afro Cuban life or customs Rather these Euro Cubans sought to make traditional elements of African art more palatable for mainstream Cuban society In an essay entitled Uniting Blacks in a raceless nation author Arnedo Gomez describes this cultural appropriation by White Cubans explaining the movement accommodated and folklorised Afro Cuban forms in order to make them acceptable within the dominant European derived tradition 5 Afro Cuban responses to White Afrocubanista art were conflicted and ranging Some members of the black middle class opposed the white portrayals of black identity and culture finding them racist and derogatory 6 Some members of the black middle class found merit in the Euro centric interpretations of African culture In fact many Afro Cuban intellectuals embraced some of the more problematic and questionable elements of the underlying white nationalist beliefs brought to Afrocubanismo by White elitists 6 Still other Afro Cubans found that Afrocubanista art in spite of racist depictions opened opportunities for Black Cuban art forms to become part of the Cuban cultural sphere All of these factors contributed to what Arnedo Gomez calls the reformulation of Afrocubanismo According to Gomez Afro Cubans repurposed Afrocubanista art to move away from the stereotypical portrayals that White Afrocubanista artists depicted 4 Black middle class and working class Afro Cubans contributed their own influences Afrocubanismo was an ideological and cultural product that was neither stable nor coherent and open to divergent interpretations Major Themes editWhile rooted in White ideologies and problematic conceptualizations of African culture the Afro Cuban perspective on the themes of the movement were more concerned with social justice equality and questioning of the status quo 6 The purposes behind Afrocubanismo s various expressions were different For some White Cubans the significance of Afro Cubanismo was the revalorization of African art as an expression of Cuban identity Some scholars like Fernando Ortiz advocated that Afrocubanismo and African derived art forms were important for the anthropological pursuit of acknowledging the history behind Cuban identity in all forms 5 These White Afrocubanistas idealized the concept of a raceless Cuba where all its citizens shared a single national identity The problem for Afro Cubans with this idealized view of Afrocubanismo and race was that it trivialized the experiences of blacks in Cuba and ignored the serious systemic racial issues underpinning Cuban interracial relations Ortiz can be cited from the mid 1930s onwards referring to Afrocuban arts as an abandoned cultural treasure something of value to be carefully studied and protected and is in vocal in his support of the analysis of all forms of Afrocuban music and literature 5 Even in his notably racist earlier works that attack African customs Ortiz inadvertently captured the depth complexity and richness of African cultural practices and expression Ortiz even in this earliest study provide d detailed descriptions of African derived deities their personalities their iconic representations the altars and shrines devoted to them the religious ritual associated with their worship and the songs and dances incorporated into such worship Indeed the majority of Ortiz s study mutely testifies to the complexity and poetic cohesiveness of the religious beliefs which he condemns as savage and dangerous 5 Black Afrocubanistas were less focused on describing and idealizing African art and more concerned with capturing the reality of African life The poetry of Nicholas Guillen an Afro Cuban poet celebrates black street culture and music 4 Afro Cuban literature of the 1930s was often political and served as a form of protest and criticism of the dominant White nationalism of Cuba Afro Cuban visual arts too served as a statement against the homogeneity of White Cuban culture 4 Many black Afrocubanista artists used their art to counter the ideals of equality and the perceived unity among blacks and whites that White Cubans claimed existed Afro Cuban art served to question the ideologies of White Cubans Guillen s poetry celebrated black street culture and Arozarena and Pedroso chant to workers and the dispossessed and criticise what Arozarena described as the bourgeois conception of Afro Cuban culture 4 Some Afro Cuban poets and artists actually rejected the term Afro Cuban and its use as a classifying term for African derived art Nicholas Guillen and Arredondo two black Afrocubanismo authors rejected the term because it felt constructed it separated between categories of black Cuban and white Cuban and it made the goal of a single unified mulatto Cuban identity impossible In this sense themes of Afrocubanismo also include this type of anti Afro Cuban perspectives held by some black intellectuals Afro Cuban literature was often written to express criticism over the prevalent racism and glossing over of social issues of racial inequality Major Artists editFernando Ortiz A White Cuban author and advocate of Afrocuban studies Nicholas Guillen an Afro Cuban poet Alberto Pena Afrocuban painter Teodoro Ramos Blanco Afro Cuban sculptor Andres Alvarez Naranjo Afro Cuban sculptor Angel Pinto Afro Cuban author and criticReferences edit Ortiz Fernando 1950 La Afrocania de la musica folklorica de Cuba La Habana revised ed 1965 Ortiz Fernando 1951 Los bailes y el teatro de los negros en el folklore de Cuba Letras Cubanas La Habana Continuation of the previous book contains transcriptions of percussion in notation and lyrics of toques and cantos a los santos variously in Lucumi and Spanish Carpentier Alejo 2001 1946 Music in Cuba edited and with an introduction by Timothy Brennan translated by Alan West Duran Cultural Studies of the Americas 5 Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press page needed ISBN 0 8166 3229 4 hardcover ISBN 0 8166 3230 8 pbk First published as La musica en cuba Mexico Fondo de Cultura Economica 1946 Second edition under the same title Coleccion popular 109 Mexico Fondo de Cultura Economica 1984 ISBN 968 16 0250 1 pbk Third edition Giraldilla series Havana Editorial Letras Cubanas 1988 A standard work on the history of Cuban music up to 1940 a b c d e f g h i Arnedo Gomez Miguel April 2012 Uniting blacks in a raceless nation Afro Cuban reformulations of Afrocubanismo and mestizaje in 1930s Cuba Journal of Iberian and Latin American Studies 18 33 59 doi 10 1080 14701847 2012 716644 S2CID 144275676 a b c d e f g h Moore Robin D Summer 1994 Representations of Afrocuban Expressive Culture in the Writings of Fernando Ortiz Latin American Music Review 15 1 32 54 doi 10 2307 3085947 JSTOR 3085947 a b c d Moore Robin 2006 Encyclopedia of African American Culture and History Farmington Hills Michigan Gale Cage Learning pp 1 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Afrocubanismo amp oldid 1213124320, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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