From Interethnic Alliances to the “Magical Negro”: Afro-Asian Interactions in Asian Latin American Literature

This essay studies Afro-Asian sociocultural interactions in cultural production by or about Asian Latin Americans, with an emphasis on Cuba and Brazil. Among the recurrent characters are the black slave, the <i>china mulata</i>, or the black ally who expresses sympathy or even marries th...

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Main Author: Ignacio López-Calvo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-11-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/7/4/110
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spelling doaj-9a9e7ea4d80944d6a9fc5f4df47600522020-11-24T21:48:35ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872018-11-017411010.3390/h7040110h7040110From Interethnic Alliances to the “Magical Negro”: Afro-Asian Interactions in Asian Latin American LiteratureIgnacio López-Calvo0Department of Literatures, Languages and Cultures, Associated Faculty, Critical Race and Ethnic Studies, University of California, Merced, CA 95343, USAThis essay studies Afro-Asian sociocultural interactions in cultural production by or about Asian Latin Americans, with an emphasis on Cuba and Brazil. Among the recurrent characters are the black slave, the <i>china mulata</i>, or the black ally who expresses sympathy or even marries the Asian character. This reflects a common history of bondage shared by black slaves, Chinese coolies, and Japanese indentured workers, as well as a common history of marronage. These conflicts and alliances between Asians and blacks contest the official discourse of <i>mestizaje</i> (Spanish-indigenous dichotomies in Mexico and Andean countries, for example, or black and white binaries in Brazil and the Caribbean) that, under the guise of incorporating the other, favored whiteness while attempting to silence, ignore, or ultimately erase their worldviews and cultures.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/7/4/110Afro-Asian interactionsAsian Latin American literature and charactersSanfancón<i>china mulata</i>“magical negro”<i>chinos mambises</i>BrazilCubatransculturationdiscourse of mestizaje
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ignacio López-Calvo
spellingShingle Ignacio López-Calvo
From Interethnic Alliances to the “Magical Negro”: Afro-Asian Interactions in Asian Latin American Literature
Humanities
Afro-Asian interactions
Asian Latin American literature and characters
Sanfancón
<i>china mulata</i>
“magical negro”
<i>chinos mambises</i>
Brazil
Cuba
transculturation
discourse of mestizaje
author_facet Ignacio López-Calvo
author_sort Ignacio López-Calvo
title From Interethnic Alliances to the “Magical Negro”: Afro-Asian Interactions in Asian Latin American Literature
title_short From Interethnic Alliances to the “Magical Negro”: Afro-Asian Interactions in Asian Latin American Literature
title_full From Interethnic Alliances to the “Magical Negro”: Afro-Asian Interactions in Asian Latin American Literature
title_fullStr From Interethnic Alliances to the “Magical Negro”: Afro-Asian Interactions in Asian Latin American Literature
title_full_unstemmed From Interethnic Alliances to the “Magical Negro”: Afro-Asian Interactions in Asian Latin American Literature
title_sort from interethnic alliances to the “magical negro”: afro-asian interactions in asian latin american literature
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2018-11-01
description This essay studies Afro-Asian sociocultural interactions in cultural production by or about Asian Latin Americans, with an emphasis on Cuba and Brazil. Among the recurrent characters are the black slave, the <i>china mulata</i>, or the black ally who expresses sympathy or even marries the Asian character. This reflects a common history of bondage shared by black slaves, Chinese coolies, and Japanese indentured workers, as well as a common history of marronage. These conflicts and alliances between Asians and blacks contest the official discourse of <i>mestizaje</i> (Spanish-indigenous dichotomies in Mexico and Andean countries, for example, or black and white binaries in Brazil and the Caribbean) that, under the guise of incorporating the other, favored whiteness while attempting to silence, ignore, or ultimately erase their worldviews and cultures.
topic Afro-Asian interactions
Asian Latin American literature and characters
Sanfancón
<i>china mulata</i>
“magical negro”
<i>chinos mambises</i>
Brazil
Cuba
transculturation
discourse of mestizaje
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/7/4/110
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