Black and Indigenous: Garifuna Activism and Consumer Culture in Honduras

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Black and Indigenous: Garifuna Activism and Consumer Culture in Honduras
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Mark Anderson
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:304
Dimensions(mm): Height 216,Width 140
ISBN/Barcode 9780816661022
ClassificationsDewey:305.89607283
Audience
Further/Higher Education

Publishing Details

Publisher University of Minnesota Press
Imprint University of Minnesota Press
Publication Date 9 December 2009
Publication Country United States

Description

Garifuna live in Central America, primarily Honduras, and the United States. Identified as Black by others and by themselves, they also claim indigenous status and rights in Latin America. Examining this set of paradoxes, Mark Anderson shows how, on the one hand, Garifuna embrace discourses of tradition, roots, and a paradigm of ethnic political struggle. On the other hand, Garifuna often affirm blackness through assertions of African roots and affiliations with Blacks elsewhere, drawing particularly on popular images of U.S. blackness embodied by hip-hop music and culture. Black and Indigenous explores the politics of race and culture among Garifuna in Honduras as a window into the active relations among multiculturalism, consumption, and neoliberalism in the Americas. Based on ethnographic work, Anderson questions perspectives that view indigeneity and blackness, nativist attachments and diasporic affiliations, as mutually exclusive paradigms of representation, being, and belonging. As Anderson reveals, within contemporary struggles of race, ethnicity, and culture, indigeneity serves as a normative model for collective rights, while blackness confers a status of subaltern cosmopolitanism. Indigeneity and blackness, he concludes, operate as unstable, often ambivalent, and sometimes overlapping modes through which people both represent themselves and negotiate oppression.

Author Biography

Mark Anderson is assistant professor of anthropology at the University of California, Santa Cruz.