So i am doing research on various minstrel traditions, particularly the black face tradition. Ultimately, this book, aimed for popular consumption, is strangely written and the authors do not position themselves well. I appreciate their premise, which is that blackface as a tradition in America is not only disparaging and hateful, but that black people have felt pride and found freedom in using blackface. However, the execution I found fairly poor and unorganized, and ultimately unconvincing (although I do not disagree with the premise!). Chapter 4 on Bert William's is by far the clearest, most well constructed chapter. The poor ethnography at the end of chapter 3 also highlights the amateurish nature of this text.
Now, for the longer review:
These two white authors write a reception history of the complex history of black minstrelsy, in order to understand the impact of black minstrelsy on American culture throughout the 20th century. They are interested in trying to make sense of black enjoyment of black minstrel (re-)productions. In the introduction Watkins outlines three key modes of black engagement with the black minstrel tradition—embracing, signifying on, and attacking/refuting—that are all at play in the text. This text refutes black minstrelsy as a practice of invectivity, marking it instead as a practice of liberation/freedom for performers and audiences. In their re-collection of reception histories, their major aim is to highlight the possibilities of performative outcomes and psychological impacts of black minstrel shows. Their opening chapters (1-3) about the 19th century reads more as conjecture and personal sentiments than historically rigorous writing/research. The middle four chapters (4-7) detail the drastic differences in the 20th century between various black entertainers engaging with black minstrelsy and waxing nostalgic on the tradition. The final three chapters explore the distinction between Southern connections to black minstrel traditions (Hurston, Flavor Flav, and Perry) as compared with northern critics (Wright, Hughes, Lee). The two other crucial points the authors want to hit home is that there is “racial progress” across time and that black entertainers are particularly (perhaps uniquely) brilliant in their performances, which far out-do their white counterparts in terms of cleverness and innovation. Both of these points seem to play into capitalist, neo-liberal narratives of racial uplift through individual talent that rises to the top in free-market competition.
This popular history text has three main issues. The first is a lack of theory or methodological reflection, which would be helpful to the invectivity project. The second is a lack of self-reflection with regard to the authors social fact of whiteness—how does their gaze on these events impact the text? The third is a failure to fully flesh out the liberatory actuality that is referenced. Bert Williams’ pride in his black face persona that tragically performs the sorrows of the human condition (ch 4) or Zora Neale Hurston’s appreciation for black southern dialogue and gestures (ch. 9) highlight a freedom in signifying on white expectations and bringing to the fore authentic, complex black life that conjures a carefree world for black characters where “they could thrive free from whites and their oppressive ways” (276). A blackness that is creative and generative outside of the terror that most cultural critics mark as constitutive of blackness. However, these contours of liberation could be clearer. What they do make clear is that all performances in blackface by whites are inflecting invectivity and further that all-white audiences coerce (by demand/desire) steretotypical, demeaning performances by black artists. In this way, the authors draw a distinction between white and black minstrelsy . Black minstrelsy is characterized as engaging with authentic traditions, using “masking and foolishness [to] provide freedom as well as bondage” (306), for black audience enjoyment, while white blackface minstrelsy is characterized by invectivity. In this way, the book aims to complicate the general idea of invectivity in BFM by considering the long, parrallel history of Black minstrelsy.