Perú Negro : choreographing and performing Afro-Peruvian identity, 1969 to the present

Date of Award

1-1-2015

Language

English

Document Type

Dissertation

Degree Name

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

College/School/Department

Department of Latin American, Caribbean and U.S. Latino Studies

Program

Spanish

Content Description

1 online resource (xvi, 413 pages) : illustrations (chiefly color)

Dissertation/Thesis Chair

Patricia de Santana Pinho

Committee Members

Edna Acosta-Belén, Glyne Griffith, Thomas F. DeFrantz

Keywords

Afro-Peruvian, Choreography, Familial Bonds, Memorization of Identity, Performance, Perú Negro, Black people, Dance, Black, Folk music, Folk dance music

Subject Categories

African American Studies | Dance | Latin American Studies

Abstract

Founded in 1969 in Lima, Perú Negro is now the most widely recognized Afro-Peruvian dance and music company. In order to emphasize the black presence in a nation that has dominantly narrated itself as mestizo, Perú Negro has produced representations of blackness that are grounded both on the history of slavery and on Diasporic idealizations of Africanness. While meant to value blackness through its music and dance performance, Perú Negro’s representations have contributed to romanticize the slave past and essentialize the African roots. This is made clear in the group’s concept of “family” upon which Perú Negro has relied to define who can and cannot belong to the group as well as who is capable of performing blackness. Central to this concept is the idea of blood, both in terms of blood relationships and the “black tendencies,” have been passed down from generation to generation. Membership was exclusive to Afro-Peruvians (the darker-skinned, the “better”). The practice of “keeping it in the family” dates back to the founding of the company and it also relates to the enslaved communities that survived the colonial regime. I am analyzing Perú Negro’s history as divided into three phases, which are characterized by major developments on the international, national and local levels. I arrived at this three-phase historical trajectory by analyzing the following: the shifting context of the Peruvian nation, Perú Negro’s relationship with the state and other sponsors, Perú Negro’s process of internationalization, Perú Negro’s definition of its membership, and the company’s choreographies, music and lyrics. The central research topics of my project are: Black Identity and the Black Body, Black Identity and the Past, Black Identity and Place, and Commodification of Blackness.

Comments

Requested ProQuest takedown; no end date

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