Humor and Violence: Seeing Europeans in Central African Art
Humor and Violence: Seeing Europeans in Central African Art
Humor and Violence examines the rich history of portraying Europeans in Central African art in images ranging from heart-wrenching scenes of human trafficking to playful parodies of colonialists. Z. S. Strother contends that the dialectic of humor and violence reveals deep insights into the psychology of power and resistance that continues to operate in the region today. Her argument is built on a set of works of art and demonstrates the important role that patronage and political and social history played in their creation. Strother conveys Central African ideas about how the therapeutic power of humor can initiate social change and upset power relations between oppressors and oppressed. This analysis plunges seemingly benign figures into a maelstrom of violence and crime-rape, murder, torture, and forced labor on a massive scale. By restoring the dialectic of humor, it reveals the complicated psychological codependency of Africans and Europeans over a long period of history and maintains that art plays a mediating function in the mechanics and ethics of power.
Author: Z. S. Strother
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Published: 12/26/2016
Pages: 364
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 2.60lbs
Size: 9.00h x 8.50w x 0.90d
ISBN: 9780253022677
Review Citation(s):
Choice 08/01/2017
About the Author
Z. S. Strother is Riggio Professor of African Art at Columbia University. She is author of Inventing Masks: Agency and History in the Art of the Central Pende, winner of the Arnold Rubin Outstanding Publication Award. http: //www.columbia.edu/cu/arthistory/faculty/Strother.html