Black Women's Geographies and the Afterlives of the Sugar Plantation

dc.contributor.author

Mcinnis, JC

dc.date.accessioned

2022-05-03T18:54:24Z

dc.date.available

2022-05-03T18:54:24Z

dc.date.issued

2019-12-01

dc.date.updated

2022-05-03T18:54:24Z

dc.description.abstract

<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>This essay examines how several contemporary black women artists—Attica Locke, Natalie Baszile, Beyoncé, Ava DuVernay, and Kara Walker—interrogate the afterlives of the sugar plantation in present day literature, performance, and visual art. Drawing on Katherine McKittrick’s conceptualization of “black women’s geographies,” I show how these artists turn to the landscape and built environment of the sugar plantation and factory to restore black women and the US South to the global history of sugar. Part one, “Plantation Pasts,” examines Locke’s 2012 novel, The Cutting Season, alongside Kara Walker’s 2014 installation, A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby, as critiques of the sugar plantation’s ongoing economic viability through plantation tourism and modern agribusiness. By foregrounding a “logic of perishability” that insists on the plantation’s dissolution and demise, Locke and Walker interrogate these sugar plantation afterlives to exhume, expose, and ultimately revise buried histories of racial dispossession and consumption in the US and global sugar industries. Part two, “Plantation Futures,” examines how Natalie Baszile’s 2014 novel, Queen Sugar, its television adaptation created by Ava DuVernay, and several of Beyoncé’s music videos—“Déjà Vu” (2006), “Formation” (2016), and the visual album Lemonade (2016)—“return” to Louisiana’s sugar plantation geographies to confront the violent histories of slavery and Jim Crow and to reconcile African Americans’ contentious relationship to land, agriculture, and contemporary southern identity in the post-Civil Rights era. Given the limits of colonial and state archives of slavery, I argue that these artists reestablish the landscape and architecture of the sugar plantation and factory as counter-archives, wherein the slave cabin, big house, refinery, and cane fields are figured as contested sites of official history and memory. In doing so, they “respatialize” hegemonic geographies, exposing and indicting the persisting legacies of racial-sexual dispossession and violence, on one hand, and positing embodied practices of pleasure, mourning, and collectivity as modes of “reterritorialization” on the other, imagining a new relationship to land, agriculture, and the earth.</jats:p>

dc.identifier.issn

0896-7148

dc.identifier.issn

1468-4365

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25003

dc.language

en

dc.publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

dc.relation.ispartof

American Literary History

dc.relation.isversionof

10.1093/alh/ajz043

dc.title

Black Women's Geographies and the Afterlives of the Sugar Plantation

dc.type

Journal article

pubs.begin-page

741

pubs.end-page

774

pubs.issue

4

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

pubs.organisational-group

Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

pubs.organisational-group

English

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

31

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