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- Title
"They Are Delighted to Dance for Themselves": Deconstructing Intimacies - Moreau de Saint-Méry's "Danse" and the Spectre of Black Female Sexuality in Colonial Saint Domingue.
- Authors
CUMMINGS, SHERRI V.
- Abstract
At a time when Enlightenment ideology, European travel narratives and memoirs influenced racial discourses about African women and their daughters in the Americas, Mederic Elié Moreau de Saint-Méry, writing in 1796, composed the essay "Danse". This paper translates and explores the prominent writer's voyeuristic observations of the detailed preparations, festive gatherings and stylized body movements of free(d) and enslaved women on the island of Saint Domingue. Deconstructing Saint-Méry's biased gaze, I argue that intimacy needs to be redefined considering the everyday lives of women of colour, especially in the port cities of Cap Français and Port-au-Prince, before the stirrings of revolution.
- Subjects
DE Saint-Mery, Moreau; BLACK women; HUMAN sexuality in literature; HUMAN sexuality in dance; HAITIAN Revolution, 1791-1804; BLACK people; HUMAN sexuality
- Publication
Journal of Caribbean History, 2017, Vol 51, Issue 2, p143
- ISSN
0047-2263
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1353/jch.2017.0007