Jonathan P. Eburne,
"Adoptive Affinities: Josephine Baker's Humanist International"
(page 5 of 6)
More broadly, Baker's adoptive family was both the extension and the
apotheosis of her more politically charged adoption of France as an
alternative to the United States. Baker's commitment to fighting
publicly against segregation and racial violence in the U.S. led her to
reject one nationalism in favor of another; she became a French citizen
by marriage in 1937, adopting the nation that made her famous. Indeed,
in a speech addressed to a French military audience in the early 1960s,
Baker revised her signature song, "J'ai deux amours" [I have two
loves], transforming it from a celebration of transatlantic dual
citizenship into a rejection of the United States and a panegyric to her
adoptive homeland: "Je n'ai qu'un seul amour," she claimed: I
only have one love. Baker, unlike Garry Davis or the Surrealists, did
not reject nationalism or nations; she instead cast her lot with France,
maintaining her patriotism and attachment to De Gaulle's Fifth Republic
throughout the Algerian War and the events of May 1968.
Baker's allegiance to French nationalism in the midst of colonial
warfare reveals, at best, her naïveté toward French politics and, at
worst, the ideological proximity of the rainbow tribe to the
assimilationist tactics of French colonialism. Yet Baker's insistence—at
least through 1969—on the significance of Les Milandes' location on
French soil was as much rhetorical and strategic as it was heartfelt or
rooted in ideological fealty. For one, Baker's patriotism was,
especially after she began adopting children, as instrumental as her
international fame: her voluminous correspondence with French
authorities, now housed in Emory University's special collections
library, attests to her efforts to secure state support for Les Milandes
and for the College of Brotherhood she hoped to establish there.
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