Masking and Power Cultural Studies ofthe Americas Edited by George Yúdice,Jean Franco,and Juan Flores Volume 8 Masking and Power: Carnival and Popular Culture in the Caribbean Gerard Aching Volume 7 Scenes from Postmodern Life Beatriz Sarlo Volume 6 Consumers and Citizens: Globalization and Multicultural Conflicts Néstor García Canclini Volume 5 Music in Cuba Alejo Carpentier Volume 4 Infertilities: Exploring Fictions ofBarren Bodies Robin Truth Goodman Volume 3 Latin Americanism Román de la Campa Volume 2 Disidentifications: Queers ofColor and the Performance ofPolitics José Esteban Muñoz Volume 1 The Fence and the River: Culture and Politics at the U.S.–Mexico Border Claire F.Fox Masking and Power Carnival and Popular Culture in the Caribbean Gerard Aching Cultural Studies ofthe Americas,Volume 8 University ofMinnesota Press Minneapolis London Copyright 2002 by the Regents ofthe University ofMinnesota Quotations from Notebook ofa Return to the Native Land,by Aimé Césaire,are from Aimé Césaire: The Collected Poetry,translated by Clayton Eshleman and Annette Smith (Berkeley:University ofCalifornia Press,1983).Copyright 1983 The Regents ofthe University ofCalifornia.Reprinted with permission ofthe University ofCalifornia Press. Quotations in French from Cahier d’un retour au pays natal,by Aimé Césaire,are reprinted from the edition ofthis book published by Editions Présence Africaine in 1956.Reprinted with permission ofEditions Présence Africaine. All rights reserved.No part ofthis publication may be reproduced,stored in a retrieval system,or transmitted,in any form or by any means,electronic, mechanical,photocopying,recording,or otherwise,without the prior written permission ofthe publisher. Published by the University ofMinnesota Press 111 Third Avenue South,Suite 290 Minneapolis,MN 55401-2520 http://www.upress.umn.edu Library ofCongress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Aching,Gerard. Masking and power :carnival and popular culture in the Caribbean / Gerard Aching. p. cm.— (Cultural Studies ofthe Americas ;v.8) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-8166-4017-3 (hardback :alk.paper) — ISBN 0-8166-4018-1 (pbk.: alk.paper) 1. Carnival—Caribbean Area. 2. Masquerades—Caribbean Area. 3. Popular culture—Caribbean Area. 4. Caribbean Area—Social conditions. I. Title. II. Series. GT4223.A2 A25 2002 394.25'09729—dc21 2002005312 Printed in the United States ofAmerica on acid-free paper The University ofMinnesota is an equal-opportunity educator and employer. 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 05 04 03 02 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Contents Acknowledgments vii Introduction:Masking,Misrecognition,Mimicry 1 PARTI Undisguised Masking ONE Dispossession,Nonpossession,and Self-Possession: Postindependence Masking in Lovelace’s The Dragon Can’t Dance 51 TWO The New Visibilities:Middle-Class Cosmopolitanism in the Street 73 PARTII Masking through Language THREE Specularity and the Language ofCorpulence: Estrella’s Body in Cabrera Infante’s Tres tristes tigres 101 FOUR Turning a Blind Eye in the Name ofthe Law: Cultural Alienation in Chamoiseau’s Solibo Magnifique 126 Notes 153 Works Cited 165 Index 171 This page intentionally left blank Acknowledgments This project has been long in the making,and there are many people to thank.At the institutional level,I am grateful to the Center for the Critical Analysis ofContemporary Culture at Rutgers University,New Brunswick, for the opportunity it gave me in 1993to begin approaching my inquiries in an interdisciplinary fashion.Copies ofPeter Minshall’s public speeches, “The Use of Traditional Figures in Carnival Art,”“Where Do We Go from Here?”and “Address,”provided by the Callaloo Company,were of great value.I would also like to thank the Spanish and Portuguese depart- ment at New York University for its collegial support ofmy research and writing at very crucial junctures in their development.Many thanks to Doug Armato and his assistant,Gretchen Asmussen,of the University ofMinnesota Press for their fine professionalism. I am grateful to Ulrich Baer,Manthia Diawara,Olakunle George,Sylvia Molloy, Judylyn Ryan, and George Yúdice for their time, critical en- gagement,and ideas.For their advice and insightful questions,I would like to thank Sandra Dunn,Bruno Gaudenzi,Conrad James,Cecelia Law- less,Ardele Lister,Pierre Sassone,Todd Senzon,and Edward Sullivan.I am indebted to Jeffrey and Cheryl Aching,Gabriela Basterra,Clif and Vanessa Davenport,Françoise Hayet,Catherine Lenfestey,and Carmen Wesson for their long-standing interest and support.For his patient at- tention during the last leg ofbook preparation,I am especially grateful to Miguel Ángel Balsa. Finally,it is a pleasure to dedicate this book to my parents,William and Ann Aching,who,in very important and tangible ways,encouraged me to undertake and complete this project. vii This page intentionally left blank I N T R O D U C T I O N Masking, Misrecognition, Mimicry He wanted everybody to see him.When they saw him,they had to be blind not to see. —aldrickfrom The Dragon Can’t Dance,by Earl Lovelace Creole is originally a kind ofconspiracy that concealed itselfby its public and open expression. —édouard glissant,Caribbean Discourse The epigraphs with which I open this chapter have inspired me to think about this study in a particular way. The first one comes from Earl Lovelace’s classic novel about transformations in Trinidad and Tobago’s carnival and urban society less than a decade after the twin-island na- tion obtained its political independence from Britain in 1962. In this excerpt,Aldrick,the novel’s protagonist,expresses the desire to be seen in a more profound manner than the collective gaze that observes him as he performs and revels in the dragon-mask costume that he would fabricate almost single-handedly and introduce into the streets of the capital during the annual carnival festivities.What has intrigued me about Aldrick’s expression of this desire to be seen is the apparent contradic- tion in terms.Why would he want “everybody to see him”after he had gone to the trouble of creating and wearing his dragon mask? Further- more,Aldrick is quick to claim that his mask and performance will be so convincing that when the public sets eyes on him,it would have “to be blind not to see.” In perceiving this distinction, the dragon-mask maker suggests that two modes of visual perception lie at odds: one 1
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