Josephine Baker in Art and Life

Paperback
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Author: Bennetta Jules-Rosette

ISBN-10: 0252074122

ISBN-13: 9780252074127

Category: African American Arts & Entertainment Biography

Josephine Baker (1906-1975) was a dancer, singer, actress, author, politician, militant, and philanthropist, whose images and cultural legacy have survived beyond the hundredth anniversary of her birth. Neither an exercise in postmodern deconstruction nor simple biography, Josephine Baker in Art and Life presents a critical cultural study of the life and art of the Franco-American performer whose appearances as the savage dancer Fatou shocked the world.\  \ Although the study remains...

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Beyond biography: a legendary performer’s legacy of symbolism  The New York Times - Kaiama L. GloverStill, Baker has inspired several biographies and documentaries, and the question arises about the need for yet another. But Bennetta Jules-Rosette, the author of Black Paris and other books, makes a solid case for just one more with her well-researched and original Josephine Baker in Art and Life. Like many writers before her, Jules-Rosette is clearly captivated by her subject, but she manages to temper her star-struck curiosity with impressive intellectual rigor.

List of Illustrations     ixForeword: A Luminous Humanism   Simon Njami     xiiPreface     xvAcknowledgments     xviiPrologue     1Creating the ImageTouring with Baker's Image     13Opening Nights     47Celluloid Projections     72Living the DreamDress Rehearsals     127Baker's Scripts     155Hues of the Rainbow in a Global Village     184Changing the WorldLegendary Legionnaire     213Echoes and Influences     243Eternal Comeback     268Chronology     287Notes     297Bibliography     327Discography     341Index     345

\ Kaiama L. GloverStill, Baker has inspired several biographies and documentaries, and the question arises about the need for yet another. But Bennetta Jules-Rosette, the author of Black Paris and other books, makes a solid case for just one more with her well-researched and original Josephine Baker in Art and Life. Like many writers before her, Jules-Rosette is clearly captivated by her subject, but she manages to temper her star-struck curiosity with impressive intellectual rigor.\ — The New York Times\ \ \ \ \ Publishers WeeklySavage dancer, Black Venus, exotic Jazz Age star, liberated new woman, gender-bending cross-dresser, mother, socialist, war hero and writer—Josephine Baker (1906–1975) was all of those in life and in the images she projected. In this vibrant if academic portrait of Baker, Jules-Rosette alerts the reader that this is "not a biography" but an exploration of "the complex construction of Baker's multiple images in art and life." The first part opens with the tourist attractions that Baker sparked, not with her birth, then moves through her stage performance history, and concludes with an analysis of her films and films about her. In Part II, Baker emerges as a fully independent figure, influencing the art and fashion worlds, and in Part III, Jules-Rosette discusses the obstacles Baker confronted as she struggled to promote her ahead-of-its-time multicultural worldview. Jules-Rosette's scholarly deconstruction, generously documented (including more than 50 illustrations) and supplemented with a chronology, particularly helpful in a thematically structured work, will reward Baker fans. As well, the book's careful documentation, ample bibliography and discography add tremendous value for readers engaged in cultural, ethnic, diaspora or women's studies. (Apr.)\ Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.\ \ \ Library JournalThis is a thoughtful, scholarly study of Josephine Baker (1906–75)—performer, writer, activist, and philanthropist—whose life and fame embraced numerous contradictions, ranging from her 1925 role as the savage dancer Fatou in La revue nègreand her onstage shows at the Folies Bergère to her alliance with French Counterespionage Services and her work on behalf of children and global harmony. Jules-Rosette (director, African & African American studies, Univ. of California, San Diego; Black Paris) includes thoroughly researched details about Baker's engrossing life. Using sociosemiotic methods, she goes well beyond biography to explore skillfully the symbols and images Baker created and projected. She elicits their broader meaning and influence in terms of art, gender, race, politics, universal brotherhood, and more. Through Jules-Rosette's review of diverse materials—including posters, photographs, scripts, Baker's own writings, costumes, and humanitarian and political pursuits—a sensitive and in-depth story emerges, revealing the cultural relevance of a remarkable woman whose impact still reverberates. Fifty-one photographs enhance this innovative volume, which should be a welcome addition to large academic and public collections as well as to university reading lists.\ —Carol J. Binkowski\ \