Semantic Scholar Open Access 2021 136 sitasi

Social Control

E. Metcalf

Abstrak

history of black American art have often been difficult to disentangle from one another. Such confusion is encountered in all art, of course, but it has been a particular burden for black Americans. Art represents and sanctifies what is valued in a society; the ability to create and appreciate art implies heightened human sensibility and confers social status and prestige. A people said to be without art, or with a degraded form of it, reputedly show themselves lacking in the qualities that dignify human experience and social interaction. They are said to be "uncultured," "primitive," unable to participate in refined society. Definitions of art are therefore highly political. They are major battlegrounds on which the struggle for human and social recognition is waged. A people can ill afford to let others control the definitions by which their arts are classified and evaluated. The history of black American art demonstrates the social consequences of such aesthetic control. During the first centuries of black experience in America, partly to support a social system grounded on the denial of the humanity of black people, whites generally refused to admit that blacks could make art at all. By the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth, enough black artists had mastered the white Europeanized aesthetic tradition to argue that blacks had proved their civility and should be allowed the benefits of American democracy. No "people that has ever produced great literature and art," said James Weldon Johnson, "has ever been looked on by the world as distinctly inferior."' Yet to gain a measure of acceptance from the white art world and white society, black fine artists have often been forced to conform to artistic traditions and forms that denied their unique cultural heritage and the reality of their American experience. This was not true for all black artists, however. From the earliest years of their American captivity, blacks had practiced aspects of the traditional arts of Africa. Although these activities did not conform to white artistic definitions and so were not

Penulis (1)

E

E. Metcalf

Format Sitasi

Metcalf, E. (2021). Social Control. https://doi.org/10.1093/obo/9780199756384-0048

Akses Cepat

Informasi Jurnal
Tahun Terbit
2021
Bahasa
en
Total Sitasi
136×
Sumber Database
Semantic Scholar
DOI
10.1093/obo/9780199756384-0048
Akses
Open Access ✓