Mae Gwendolyn Henderson,
"Colonial, Postcolonial, and Diasporic Readings of Josephine Baker as Dancer and Performance Artist"
(page 2 of 8)
In order to situate Baker in the French cultural and racial imaginary
at the moment of her legendary emergence in Paris in the year 1925, I
begin with two paradigmatic readings of Josephine Baker, one by the
noted French dance critic André Levinson, and the other by the renowned
American poet e.e. cummings. In his fittingly entitled "The Negro Dance
under European Eyes," a review of Baker's performance in La Revue
Nègre—which no doubt contributed to making this remarkable
and historical event the succès de scandale that it became—André
Levinson captures the extraordinarily seductive vitality of Baker's
dance aesthetics while at the same time exposing the ethnocentrism of
the colonial male gaze. Describing Baker as "an extraordinary creature
of simian suppleness—a sinuous idol that enslaves and incites mankind,"
Levinson writes:
There seems to emanate from her violently shuddering
body, her bold dislocations, her springing movement, a gushing stream of
rhythm ... In the short pas de deux of the savages, which came as
the finale of the Revue Nègre, there was a wild splendor
and magnificent animality. Certain of Miss Baker's poses, back arched,
haunches protruding, arms entwined and uplifted in a phallic symbol, had
the compelling potency of the finest examples of Negro sculpture. The
plastic sense of a race of sculptors came to life and the frenzy of
African Eros swept over the audience. It was no longer a grotesque
dancing girl that stood before them, but the black Venus that haunted
Baudelaire. The dancer's personality had transcended the character of
her dance. (Acocella and Garafola, 74; originally published in
Theatre Arts Monthly, April 1927)
The implicit reference to l'art nègre invoked in
Levinson's description of la danse sauvage aligns African
ceremonial art with African-American popular and vernacular dance
culture, while the atavistic signifiers of animality and wildness locate
Baker within a European primitivist frame of reference. Moreover, by
positioning himself as observer of an object d'art, Levinson
effectively both domesticates the dance and, simultaneously, executes a
defensive maneuver designed to shield himself (but apparently only
himself and not the rest of "mankind") from the "frenzy of African Eros
[that] swept the audience." Clearly, his narrative strains to contain
the threat of difference represented by the powerful phallicism and
feral animality encoding his reading of Baker's performance.
Further, bearing out Dyer's thesis, Levinson's reading would seem to
construct Baker as surrogate for the colonies and their conquest (or
seduction through the French mission civilisatrice). Reflecting
the historical moment of France's interwar period, the representation of
Baker functions here as the utopic object of what critic Elizabeth Ezra
designates, in another context, as the "colonial unconscious." Ezra
points out that "the apotheosis of la plus grand France was also
its swan song"—the beginning of the end of the vast overseas empire
comprised by the Third Republic's expansive colonialism, which extended
from the colonies and protectorates in Indochina to central and North
Africa, and the South Pacific. In Levinson's reading, however, the dangers of Baker's
hypersexualization as a surrogate object of colonial desire are offset, as we
shall see, by the safety afforded in her imaginary disembodiment, staged
proleptically at the moment of France's future loss of empire.
Comparing Baker's seductiveness to that of Jeanne Duval, the mulatto
woman with whom the French poet Charles Baudelaire was obsessed, the
French critic's appropriative gaze transforms what he construes as
"grotesque" [read: strange, bizarre, ludicrous, out of place,
fantastic] into a kind of spectral presence ("the black Venus
that haunted Baudelaire"). Here, Levinson metaphorically
disembodies the performer ("the dancer's personality had
transcended the character of the dance") and in doing so separates the
"dancer" from the "dance." In his reading, the French critic grounds
Baker's performance in the material body, but then proceeds to
disembody or dematerialize the subject, and by extension, the
performer. Because Levinson is unable to separate representation from
embodiment, he cannot know the dancer from the dance.
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