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Description
The continuing appropriation of Black culture in the U.S. is closely tied to the trauma and injustice of the African diaspora and the history of slavery. Black people, Amenii argues, need to re-appropriate themselves, through the “excavating and re-articulating of our intellectual heritage and knowledge systems.” Citing Ahmad Azzahir’s description of African modes of thinking as “based on spirituality, symbol, mythos, and harmonium,” she sees her own work as “creative anthropology” that draws on storytelling and image-making to create self-study. Her production Food for the Gods, “a multi-media performance installation created in response to the killings of Black Men by police and other institutions of authority,” consciously includes a non-Black ensemble, so that its subject can be seen as a global issue.
Publication Date
2019
Keywords
puppetry, performing objects, African American culture
Disciplines
African American Studies | Africana Studies | Arts and Humanities | Other Theatre and Performance Studies | Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies | Theatre and Performance Studies
Recommended Citation
Amenii, Nehprii, "The Appropriation of Blackness" (2019). Living Objects: African American Puppetry Essays. 25.
https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/ballinst_catalogues/25
Included in
African American Studies Commons, Africana Studies Commons, Other Theatre and Performance Studies Commons