Black Legend: The Many Lives of Raúl Grigera and the Power of Racial Storytelling in Argentina

Black Legend: The Many Lives of Raúl Grigera and the Power of Racial Storytelling in Argentina

by Paulina L. Alberto
Black Legend: The Many Lives of Raúl Grigera and the Power of Racial Storytelling in Argentina

Black Legend: The Many Lives of Raúl Grigera and the Power of Racial Storytelling in Argentina

by Paulina L. Alberto

Hardcover

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Overview

Celebrities live their lives in constant dialogue with stories about them. But when these stories are shaped by durable racist myths, they wield undue power to ruin lives and obliterate communities. Black Legend is the haunting story of an Afro-Argentine, Raúl Grigera ('el negro Raúl'), who in the early 1900s audaciously fashioned himself into an alluring Black icon of Buenos Aires' bohemian nightlife, only to have defamatory storytellers unmake him. In this gripping history, Paulina Alberto exposes the destructive power of racial storytelling and narrates a new history of Black Argentina and Argentine Blackness across two centuries. With the extraordinary Raúl Grigera at its center, Black Legend opens new windows into lived experiences of Blackness in a 'white' nation, and illuminates how Raúl's experience of celebrity was not far removed from more ordinary experiences of racial stories in the flesh.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781108845557
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 01/06/2022
Series: Afro-Latin America
Pages: 410
Sales rank: 544,504
Product dimensions: 6.22(w) x 9.25(h) x 1.38(d)

About the Author

Paulina L. Alberto is an Argentine-born historian of Afro-Latin America, currently Professor of History, Spanish, and Portuguese at the University of Michigan. She is the author of Terms of Inclusion: Black Intellectuals in Twentieth-Century Brazil and co-editor of Rethinking Race in Modern Argentina. She won the Roberto Reis Prize for Best Book in Brazilian Studies, the Warren Dean Prize for Best Book in Brazilian History, and the James Alexander Robertson Prize for best article in the Hispanic American Historical Review.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Racial Stories; 1. Ancestors (1850–1880); 2. Community (1880–1900); 3. Youth (1900–1910); 4. Celebrity (1910–1916); 5. Defamation (1916–1930); 6. Deaths (1930–1955); Epilogue: Afterlives (1955–Present).
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