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Blacks --- African Americans --- Arts, Black --- African American arts --- Noirs --- Noirs américains --- Arts noirs --- Arts noirs américains --- History --- Histoire --- African American arts. --- History. --- Noirs américains --- Arts noirs américains --- Black people
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The present publication is dedicated to the expressive self-portraits by Jean-Michel Basquiat and covers his lifelong intensive study of the self. In Basquiat's œuvre the self-portrait, one of the major subjects of art history, occupies a central position that has not been examined to date. Jean-Michel Basquiat's self-portraits are regarded as being among the most important of his radical creative works. In addition to some 50 specific portraits of himself, we can also see his series of likenesses of African-American men as concealed reproductions of the artist. Not least because Basquiat, who was affected himself by everyday racism, identified with his heroes, saints and martyrs as he portrayed them. Thus his major topics from identity, discrimination and prejudice to capitalism, the market and oppression are all to be found in these key works
Painting --- primitivism [artistic concept] --- self-portraits --- easel paintings [paintings by form] --- tags [documents] --- Basquiat, Jean-Michel --- Self-portraits, American. --- Autoportraits --- African Americans in art. --- Arts noirs américains. --- Basquiat, Jean-Michel, --- Arts noirs américains.
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American literature --- anno 1920-1929 --- African Americans --- Harlem Renaissance --- African American arts --- Littérature américaine --- Noirs américains --- Arts noirs américains --- African American authors --- History and criticism. --- Intellectual life. --- History and criticism --- Auteurs noirs américains --- Histoire et critique --- Vie intellectuelle --- African Americans in literature. --- Harlem Renaissance. --- Modernism (Literature) --- Littérature américaine --- Noirs américains --- Arts noirs américains --- Auteurs noirs américains
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Harlem Renaissance --- African Americans --- American literature --- African American arts --- Arts, American --- Noirs américains --- Littérature américaine --- Arts noirs américains --- Arts américains --- Literary collections --- African American authors --- Anthologies --- Auteurs noirs américains --- Harlem (New York, N.Y.) --- In literature --- Noirs américains --- Littérature américaine --- Arts noirs américains --- Arts américains --- Auteurs noirs américains --- 20th century --- Intellectual life --- New York (N.Y.) --- Arts [Modern ]
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Harlem Renaissance --- African Americans --- African American arts --- Noirs américains --- Arts noirs américains --- Harlem (New York, N.Y.) --- Civilization --- History --- Civilisation --- Histoire --- Noirs américains --- Arts noirs américains --- Intellectual life --- 20th century --- New York (N.Y.) --- Arts [Modern ] --- New York (State)
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American literature --- Arts and Humanities --- Literature --- African American arts --- Littérature américaine --- Arts noirs américains --- African American authors --- History and criticism --- Periodicals --- Auteurs noirs américains --- Histoire et critique --- Périodiques --- EBSCOASP-E EJART EJARTSD EJHISTO EJLITTE EPUB-ALPHA-B EPUB-PER-FT JSTOR-E
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African Americans --- African American arts --- African Americans --- Noirs américains --- Arts noirs américains --- Noirs américains --- Dictionaries. --- Dictionaries --- Biography --- Dictionaries. --- Dictionnaires anglais --- Dictionnaires anglais --- Biographie --- Dictionnaires anglais --- United States --- Etats-Unis --- Civilization --- African American influences --- Dictionaries. --- Civilisation --- Influence noire américaine --- Dictionnaires anglais
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"This project links the engagement of Black nationalist activism to artistic experimentation in recent African American literature, visual art, and film. GerShun Avilez argues that the ideology of modern Black nationalism functions as a dominant means for artistic and theoretical experimentation in African-American literary and visual artwork in the late twentieth century and into the twenty-first. The project provides a new genealogy of contemporary African American artistic production while also shedding new light on the Black Arts Movement (1965-1975) and placing emphasis on how questions of gender and sexuality guide the artistic experimentation discussed throughout the work. More specifically, Avilez unravels how the artistic production of the Black Arts era provides a set of critical methodologies and paradigms rooted in the disidentification with Black nationalist discourses, which gives rise to a subjectivity Avilez refers to as aesthetic radicalism. This term describes the engaged critique of nationalist rhetoric that appears prominently during the 1960s and that continues to offer novel means for expressing Black intimacy and embodiment and producing experimental works of art and innovate artistic methods.--Provided by publisher.
African Americans --- Black nationalism --- American literature --- Black Arts movement --- African American arts --- Noirs américains --- Nationalisme noir --- Littérature américaine --- Arts noirs américains --- Intellectual life --- History --- African American authors --- History and criticism --- Vie intellectuelle --- Histoire --- Auteurs noirs américains --- Critique et interprétation. --- Black Arts movement. --- Afro-American arts --- Arts, African American --- Negro arts --- Ethnic arts --- 20th century. --- History and criticism. --- Noirs américains --- Littérature américaine --- Arts noirs américains --- Auteurs noirs américains --- Critique et interprétation.
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