Kaiama L. Glover,
"Introduction: Why Josephine Baker?"
(page 2 of 4)
On the one hand, Josephine Baker: A Century in the Spotlight
was meant to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the birth of
one of the last century's most important and widely celebrated artists.
In some ways, though, Josephine Baker's birthday was a pretext, an ideal
point of departure from which to examine a whole host of issues and
phenomena that have marked both Europe and the Americas over the course
of the past 100 years. American-born, French-bred, and world-renowned,
Josephine Baker shines a revealing light on the transatlantic spaces and
moments through which she moved. And so, much more than a centenary
celebration of one woman's exceptional life, this event—and the pages of
this web journal—were designed to explore in as many ways as possible
Baker's Parisian triumph and her persistent impact on the international
cultural scene. While Baker's story is perhaps most spectacular—both
literally and figuratively—in the 1920s and 1930s in Paris, her
influence can be felt in art, in literature, in the media, in politics,
in architecture, and in academia on both sides of the Atlantic up to the
present day. She has been the subject of several biographies, an Emmy
Award-winning film, and countless critical studies. She has been
recovered and imitated by entertainers and advertisers alike, reflecting
curious attitudes even now toward commercial and performative
appropriations of American blackness. Facilitating reflection on the
function of black, "foreign" womanhood—quintessential "otherness"—in the
European-North American world, Josephine Baker offers a beautiful
springboard from which to examine French and American politics of race,
gender, and entertainment in the twentieth century. The various
components of her identity provide a veritable mirror in which "our"
culture is reflected.
Josephine Baker is in many ways problematic: she is postmodern and
postcolonial, and she is as controversial and difficult to define as
these terms themselves. To comprehensively account for her initial and
enduring celebrity means looking closely at the many facets of her
artistic and political identity while also addressing larger questions
concerning the French and American social, cultural, and political
parameters that have so determined relations between Whites and Blacks,
France and the United States, Europe and its colonies, and "Us" and
"Them" over the course of the twentieth century. It means acknowledging
that Baker's contribution to world culture went far beyond the infamous
banana skirt forever associated with her name; it means accounting for
the numerous roles that she played over the course of her lifetime.
End-of-the-line dancing girl and music hall diva, painter's muse and
businesswoman, mother of 14 and civil rights activist, secret agent and
movie star, Baker moved fluidly between identities and arenas. Ever the
artist, she continuously repackaged and reinvented herself, and this
chameleon-like adaptability was ultimately as revealing of the
environments and audiences she encountered as it was of the woman
herself. Perhaps even more so.
Given this, Josephine Baker: A Century in the Spotlight
considers the big picture of Baker's life, focusing on the many ways in
which her trajectory coincided and intersected with some of the most
significant artistic and political phenomena of the last hundred years.
Scholars from a broad range of disciplines have come together here to
reflect not only on what Baker offered to and represented for Paris as a
black American, but also on her function and reception in the United
States as an empowered international media darling. We have concentrated
on Baker's handling—both intended and unwitting—of the various
categories she occupied.
We begin this exploration with a section titled "Reflections in Josephine's Mirror."
This section features "The Intelligent Body
and Erotic Soul of Josephine Baker," Margo
Jefferson's thoughtful look at the many contradictory facets of Baker's
persona and at her ambivalent reception by her international public.
Jefferson convincingly articulates the fantasies and anxieties Baker
evoked in those who witnessed her über-modern, New Negro,
femme fatale productions. Taking us from Baker's St. Louis
childhood and comedic ventures on black Broadway, through her personal
tragedies and diva-like overcompensations, to her change-making social
and political activism, Jefferson offers up the whole Baker, in all her
messy and endearing glory. And because Jefferson infuses these comments
with her own performative nuances, we decided to offer the actual
footage of her presentation here.
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