Felicia McCarren,
"The Use-Value of 'Josephine Baker'" (page 5 of 5)
Is this not also a use value on exhibit, in its Sunday best; a
concept of proper femininity that works from St. Louis to Paris? Belying
the image of the primitive, this gesture suggests that there is no
"natural" movement that is not also constructed, conscious of context.
The bird outfit and the birdcage may be someone else's idea, but what
Baker makes her own, with her hand on her skirt, is the idea that she
submits to the machinery of the industry and is fully aware of its
liberating and essentializing powers. Through her use of cinema, as
documented in her memoirs, she seems to transcend the imposition of the
still frame and the pose, the stereotypes created for national,
colonial, and commercial interests, and the fixity of the
"cliché." If she embodied and sold the concept of the bananas or
whatever else her managers dreamed up for her, she also invented herself
as a producer of images. In the words of the contemporary dance critic
Andre Levinson, "Her personality exceeded the genre."
Despite their apparent freedom of movement, professional dancers are
always trying to negotiate some agency within the frameworks that
present them as bodies on display. Is the cinema less commodifying than
a still image? One part of the answer is that Baker is playing herself;
this is how the actor functions in cinema, as Walter Benjamin points out
in his essay "The Work of Art in an Age of Mechanical Reproduction." But
it can also be seen—as Benjamin argues—as the progressive shift of the
means of production, the progressive opening up of authorship, to the
actors in film playing themselves. Baker understood, better than other
dancers of her generation, how cinema could translate dance from the
stage, how it reaches across time and space, the ways in which it
allowed her image to travel, and its effectiveness in reaching an
unsegregated audience of the future, the focus of so much of her life,
the very children she was clowning for and with.
The "use value" of Josephine Baker refers not to the use value she
might have come to represent as an icon, but to the use value she
creates, or re-creates, by revalorizing moves through their displacement
and recontextualization across continents and then into a cinematic
space. In a tiny gesture, apparently thoughtless, as well as in the
broad strokes of her liberating movement, she creates a naturalness that
is crafted for and by cinematic technology. While negotiating the
stardom constructed for her by the industry and the apparatus, Baker
maintains an aura of authenticity reserved for modern dance in the face
of machine culture. That she does so while herself "submitting to the
machine," in Leiris's phrase, points to the complexity of a modernist
formulation of naturalness held in place by the industry's massive
machine.
This paper is developed from Felicia McCarren, Dancing
Machines: Choreographies of the Age of Mechanical Reproduction,
Stanford University Press, 2003.
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