"We Real Cool": Beauty, Image, and Style in African American History
Details
Will we ever eradicate racial prejudice? Scholars have offered a variety of formulae even while most disagree as to even what race is! From Anthropology to bioscience, even DNA research suggests human beings designed racial difference, color variance, and class distinctions for specific reasons. "We Real Cool" explores evolving aesthetic perceptions how beauty has symbolized power throughout the ages, the ways it has been used in images, politics, and commerce. How racial difference is used to typify beauty in media, in advertising, in American culture explains how diverse groups influence the public from celebrities to politicians. This book looks at what Black American women have done to change their images dating back to the nineteenth century, and why it worked. "This is a richly textured study that explores the dynamics of black aesthetics by broaching ... such widely varied texts as hairstyles and folk beliefs." Tabitha Kanogo, author, "African Womanhood in Colonial Kenya" "We Real Cool" is an important study of how African Americans... generated a culture that was... not simply a reflection of whiteness." Leon Litwack, Pulitzer-Prize winning author
Autorentext
R. Iset Anuakan has a Ph.D. in History and M.A. in Folklore from UC Berkeley; she teaches for the Humanities External Masters Degree Program at California State University, Dominguez Hills. Dr. Anuakan is founder of Making History and HGTA Works, a consulting firm working with non-profit institutions in the Southern California region.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- Sprache Englisch
- Untertitel An economic and political history of institutions, We Real Cool examines meanings of black images around the globe
- Autor R. Iset Anuakan
- Titel "We Real Cool": Beauty, Image, and Style in African American History
- ISBN 978-3-8383-9641-5
- Format Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
- EAN 9783838396415
- Jahr 2010
- Größe H19mm x B220mm x T150mm
- Gewicht 437g
- Herausgeber LAP Lambert Acad. Publ.
- Anzahl Seiten 316
- Genre Geschichte
- GTIN 09783838396415