About this Issue
This double issue of The Scholar & Feminist Online celebrates
the life and legacy of Josephine Baker, one of the most important
artists of the twentieth century. Born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1906,
Baker managed to enrapture Paris during the Roaring Twenties and beyond
through her unique talents as an entertainer, activist and international
personality.
This issue includes the work of sixteen scholars from diverse
disciplines who trace and analyze the numerous roles Baker played in her
life, including chorus girl, music hall diva, movie star, "Rainbow
Tribe" mother, and civil rights activist. All of the contributions are
based on work that was presented at the 2006 Barnard College conference,
"Josephine Baker: A Century in the Spotlight," which commemorated the
100th anniversary of Baker's birth, and which was organized by Kaiama L.
Glover and Farah Griffin. This issue of The Scholar & Feminist
Online not only includes critical analysis of Baker's life, work and
legacy, but it also includes still photographs, promotional posters,
clips from her films, and footage from Baker-inspired performances by
the Studio Museum in Harlem's "Hoofer's House" dancers and others. We
are thrilled that the online nature of this publication allows us not
only to feature analysis of Baker's performances, but also to offer
actual clips within the pages of this site, making this journal issue
unique among the other works that explore Baker's enduring influence on
transatlantic culture.
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