TY - JOUR
T1 - Sylvia Wynter, Maskarade, and Performing the State
AU - Bainbridge, Danielle
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 by theRegents of theUniversity ofCalifornia. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/7/1
Y1 - 2022/7/1
N2 - First produced as a teleplay for the Jamaica Broadcasting Corporation in 1973, Sylvia Wynter's Maskarade stands at the juncture of art-making and statecraft. The play centers on the Jamaican performance tradition of Jonkonnu, an African-descended carnival practice. Wynter's state-commissioned plays funded by the now defunct JBC were part of a larger trend in the Caribbean in the mid-twentieth century, a time when governments in the region sponsored theatrical works in order to teach newly minted citizens how to relate to emerging states. These works also reconfigured and centralized the role of Black workingclass and poor women in the new national imaginary through characters like Maskarade's Miss Gatha. Using archival recovery and critical fabulation, I analyze the origins of the 1973 teleplay and subsequent 1983 published script in order to demonstrate the connection between twentieth-century Caribbean statecraft, media, and post-colonial theory (namely Wynter's theorizations of "Indigenization").
AB - First produced as a teleplay for the Jamaica Broadcasting Corporation in 1973, Sylvia Wynter's Maskarade stands at the juncture of art-making and statecraft. The play centers on the Jamaican performance tradition of Jonkonnu, an African-descended carnival practice. Wynter's state-commissioned plays funded by the now defunct JBC were part of a larger trend in the Caribbean in the mid-twentieth century, a time when governments in the region sponsored theatrical works in order to teach newly minted citizens how to relate to emerging states. These works also reconfigured and centralized the role of Black workingclass and poor women in the new national imaginary through characters like Maskarade's Miss Gatha. Using archival recovery and critical fabulation, I analyze the origins of the 1973 teleplay and subsequent 1983 published script in order to demonstrate the connection between twentieth-century Caribbean statecraft, media, and post-colonial theory (namely Wynter's theorizations of "Indigenization").
KW - Black Feminist Theory
KW - Critical Fabulation
KW - Post-colonial theory
KW - Statecraft
KW - Theatre and Performance
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U2 - 10.1525/fmh.2022.8.3.75
DO - 10.1525/fmh.2022.8.3.75
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85135766095
SN - 2373-7492
VL - 8
SP - 75
EP - 85
JO - Feminist Media Histories
JF - Feminist Media Histories
IS - 3
ER -