Staging the Other: Blackface, Stereotypes, and the Cultural Politics of Representation in Theatre and Cinema
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.37130/DrHvol5iss1pp72-85Keywords:
Blackface, European theatre, racial representation, cultural politics, othering, performance studiesAbstract
This article examines the origins of blackface in European theatrical traditions, examining its ideological foundations and historical expressions from antiquity to the present. It examines how European performance cultures have historically mobilised blackness as a performative and racialised construct, going beyond the often American-centric interpretation of blackface. The study aims to reveal how the visual and embodied motifs of blackface have been used in popular entertainment, judicial spectacles, and religious rituals to articulate changing but enduring forms of racial othering. The approach emphasises the ways in which these activities influenced the creation of cultural identities, the aesthetics of exoticism, and larger systems of colonial authority. The paper argues that blackface in Europe is a unique and deeply ingrained cultural matrix that necessitates critical historical analysis rather than being a derivation of American minstrelsy. Building on this analysis, the article shows how racial stereotypes in early American film are reinforced on the silver screen. This study provides an understanding of how performance has historically shaped perceptions of race and identity.
References
Berg, C. R. (2002). Latino Images in Film: Stereotypes, Subversion, and Resistance. University of Texas Press.
Eschholz, S., Bufkin, J., & Long, J. (2002). Symbolic Reality Bites: Women and Racial/Ethnic Minorities in Modern Film. Sociological Spectrum, 22(3), 299–334.
Garncarz, J. (2006). The Ultimate Irony Jews Playing Nazis in Hollywood (A. Ligensa, Trans.). In A. Phillips & G. Vincendeau (Eds.), Journeys of Desire European Actors in Hollywood A Critical Companion (pp. 103–113). British Film Institute.
Guerrero, E. (1993). Framing Blackness: The African American Image in Film. Temple University Press.
Haskell, M. (1974). From Reverence to Rape: The Treatment of Women in the Movies. Penguin Books.
Hornback, R. (2018). Racism and Early Blackface Comic Traditions: From the Old World to the New. Palgrave Macmillan.
Kumar, A. M., Goh, J. Y. Q., Tan, T. H. H., & Siew, C. S. Q. (2022). Gender Stereotypes in Hollywood Movies and Their Evolution over Time: Insights from Network Analysis. Big Data and Cognitive Computing, 6(2), 50.
Lawner, L. (1998). Harlequin on the Moon: Commedia dell’Arte and the Visual Arts. Harry N. Abrams.
Lim, S. J. (Philadelphia). Anna May Wong: Performing the Modern. Temple University Press.
Lott, E. (2013). Love and Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class. Oxford University Press.
Maxwell, J. F. (1975). Slavery and the Catholic Church. Barry Rose Publishers.
Mooney, J. (2015). Irish Stereotypes in Vaudeville, 1865–1905. Palgrave Macmillan.
Mulvey, L. (1975). Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema. Screen, 16(3), 6–18.
Muscio, G. (2006). Opera,Theatre and Film: Italians in 1920s and 1930s Hollywood. In A. Phillips & G. Vincendeau (Eds.), Journeys of Desire European Actors in Hollywood A Critical Companion (pp. 45–52). British Film Institute.
Noakes, J. (2003). Racializing subversion: The FBI and the depiction of race in early Cold War movies. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 26(4), 728–749.
Rodriguez, J. P. (Ed.). (1997). The Historical Encyclopedia of World Slavery: Vol. II L-Z. ABC-CLIO.
Said, E. W. (1978). Orientalism. Vintage Press.
Sanchez-Biosca, V. (2006). The Latin Masquerade: The Spanish in Disguise in Hollywood (C. Burucua, Trans.). In A. Phillips & G. Vincendeau (Eds.), Journeys of Desire European Actors in Hollywood A Critical Companion (pp. 133–139). British Film Institute.
Spicer, A. (2006). British Male Actors in Contemporary Hollywood. In A. Phillips & G. Vincendeau (Eds.), Journeys of Desire European Actors in Hollywood A Critical Companion (pp. 141–150). British Film Institute.
Street, S. (2006). ‘Star trading’:The British in 1930s and 1940s Hollywood. In A. Phillips & G. Vincendeau (Eds.), Journeys of Desire European Actors in Hollywood A Critical Companion (pp. 61–70). British Film Institute.
Urwand, B. (2018). The Black Image on the White Screen: Representations of African Americans from the Origins of Cinema to The Birth of a Nation. Journal of American Studies, 52(1), 45–64.
Yangirov, R. M. (2006). Russian Film Extras in 1920s Hollywood. In A. Phillips & G. Vincendeau (Eds.), Journeys of Desire European Actors in Hollywood A Critical Companion (pp. 31–36). British Film Institute.