Anthropometric specimens and picturesque curiosities: the photographic orchestration of the “black” body (Brazil, circa 1865)

In Against Race Paul Gilroy writes that the “race producing” activity unleashed in the eighteenth and nineteenth-centuries “required a synthesis of logos with icon, of formal scientific rationality with something else, something visual and aesthetic” (1). During this period, scientific discourses th...

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Main Author: Rodríguez BE
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad Colegio Mayor Nuestra Señora del Rosario 2012-05-01
Series:Revista Ciencias de la Salud
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.urosario.edu.co/index.php/revsalud/article/view/2182/1914
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spelling doaj-dc367f124ceb445e8231e8da624767692021-03-02T07:05:24ZspaUniversidad Colegio Mayor Nuestra Señora del RosarioRevista Ciencias de la Salud1692-72732012-05-01102223242Anthropometric specimens and picturesque curiosities: the photographic orchestration of the “black” body (Brazil, circa 1865)Rodríguez BEIn Against Race Paul Gilroy writes that the “race producing” activity unleashed in the eighteenth and nineteenth-centuries “required a synthesis of logos with icon, of formal scientific rationality with something else, something visual and aesthetic” (1). During this period, scientific discourses that elaborate the concept of race adopt new technologies, especially photography. In this article, I am particularly interested in analyzing how the “black” body is arranged photographically. I probe some examples taken from the archives collected by the Swiss scientist Louis Agassiz and the photographer Christiano Júnior in mid-19th century Rio de Janeiro. Objective: to question how these visual artifacts contributed to the re-assemblage of racial discourses precisely at the moment when the black body was invested with legal subjectivityhttp://revistas.urosario.edu.co/index.php/revsalud/article/view/2182/1914racial discoursephotographyLouis AgassizChristiano JúniorBrazil
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rodríguez BE
spellingShingle Rodríguez BE
Anthropometric specimens and picturesque curiosities: the photographic orchestration of the “black” body (Brazil, circa 1865)
Revista Ciencias de la Salud
racial discourse
photography
Louis Agassiz
Christiano Júnior
Brazil
author_facet Rodríguez BE
author_sort Rodríguez BE
title Anthropometric specimens and picturesque curiosities: the photographic orchestration of the “black” body (Brazil, circa 1865)
title_short Anthropometric specimens and picturesque curiosities: the photographic orchestration of the “black” body (Brazil, circa 1865)
title_full Anthropometric specimens and picturesque curiosities: the photographic orchestration of the “black” body (Brazil, circa 1865)
title_fullStr Anthropometric specimens and picturesque curiosities: the photographic orchestration of the “black” body (Brazil, circa 1865)
title_full_unstemmed Anthropometric specimens and picturesque curiosities: the photographic orchestration of the “black” body (Brazil, circa 1865)
title_sort anthropometric specimens and picturesque curiosities: the photographic orchestration of the “black” body (brazil, circa 1865)
publisher Universidad Colegio Mayor Nuestra Señora del Rosario
series Revista Ciencias de la Salud
issn 1692-7273
publishDate 2012-05-01
description In Against Race Paul Gilroy writes that the “race producing” activity unleashed in the eighteenth and nineteenth-centuries “required a synthesis of logos with icon, of formal scientific rationality with something else, something visual and aesthetic” (1). During this period, scientific discourses that elaborate the concept of race adopt new technologies, especially photography. In this article, I am particularly interested in analyzing how the “black” body is arranged photographically. I probe some examples taken from the archives collected by the Swiss scientist Louis Agassiz and the photographer Christiano Júnior in mid-19th century Rio de Janeiro. Objective: to question how these visual artifacts contributed to the re-assemblage of racial discourses precisely at the moment when the black body was invested with legal subjectivity
topic racial discourse
photography
Louis Agassiz
Christiano Júnior
Brazil
url http://revistas.urosario.edu.co/index.php/revsalud/article/view/2182/1914
work_keys_str_mv AT rodriguezbe anthropometricspecimensandpicturesquecuriositiesthephotographicorchestrationoftheblackbodybrazilcirca1865
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