Carnival Art, Culture and Politics

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Bahian Carnival
Black Hawk
Blocos Afro
Buenos Aires
Caribbean
Carnival
Carnival Art
Carnival Celebrations
Carnival Revelers
Carnival Time
Carnivalesque
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Clandestine Insurgent Rebel Clown Army
Danse Macabre
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Errol Hill
Fat Tuesday
FEMA Trailer
Global Justice Movement
Globalization
King Coal
Latin America
London's Notting Hill Carnival
London’s Notting Hill Carnival
Mardi Gras Indian
Masking and masquerade
Notting Hill Carnival
performative politics in everyday life
Poison UK
Political theatre
postcolonial performance studies
Power and governance
power dynamics in society
qualitative cultural research
Race and identity
ritual and festival analysis
social identity negotiation
Spiritual Church
State resistance
Street art
Tactical Carnival
transatlantic cultural exchange
Urban performance
Van Koningsbruggen
Water Vials
World Carnivals
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138110427
  • Weight: 370g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Drawing on rich insights from cultural, post-structural and postcolonial studies, this book demands that we rethink Carnival and the carnivalesque as not just celebratory moments or even as critical subtext, but also as insightful performatives of social life anywhere, given the entangled times and spaces of these performances. The authors review Carnival’s performative aspects not merely as a calendrical festival, but rather center attention on the relationship between carnival and everyday life, and on how people negotiate their social spaces and possibilities in the context of modern power. The book therefore seeks to highlight the knotted time-spaces of power and to demonstrate the dynamic interplay between state spaces and people’s spaces that are being weaved by carnival's interlocutors. It demonstrates how Carnival and the Carnivalesque become analytic optics through which the relations of power in the social and political life of subjects who seek to tacitically or strategically vary their given identities, can be productively engaged.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Social Identities: Journal for the Study of Race, Nation and Culture.

Michaeline A. Crichlow is an historical sociologist in the African and African American Studies department at Duke University, USA, and is the author of Globalization and the Post-Creole Imagination: Notes on Fleeing the Plantation (2009) and Negotiating Caribbean Freedom: Peasants and the State in Development (2005). She has written and published on informality, creolization, development in several journals, and is currently researching for book projects on citizenship and migration and the question of place and space.