Carnival Is Woman!: Gender, Performance, and Visual Culture in Contemporary Trinidad Carnival

<p>While great strides have been made in the study of Trinidad Carnival, there has yet to be a robust inquiry into how women have contributed to its evolution. One major reason for this shortcoming is that the dominant cultural discourse relies on a reductive</p><p>dichotomy that r...

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Main Author: Noel, Samantha A.
Other Authors: Powell, Richard
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/1646
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spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-16462013-01-07T20:07:24ZCarnival Is Woman!: Gender, Performance, and Visual Culture in Contemporary Trinidad CarnivalNoel, Samantha A.Art HistoryCaribbean StudiesCaribbean ArtFestival StudiesGender StudiesPerformance ArtVisual Studies<p>While great strides have been made in the study of Trinidad Carnival, there has yet to be a robust inquiry into how women have contributed to its evolution. One major reason for this shortcoming is that the dominant cultural discourse relies on a reductive</p><p>dichotomy that recognizes the costumes created prior to the 1970s as creative and those made after the 1970s as uncreative. This arbitrary division of the costume aesthetic reflects a distinct anti-feminist bias that sees women's spirited emergence in Carnival</p><p>territory in the 1970s as apolitical. </p><p>My dissertation exposes this dilemma, and seeks to undermine this</p><p>interpretation, by its focus on how women's bodies, their presentation, and their acknowledgment of the body's potential for non-verbal articulation impacted the evolution of performance practices and the costume aesthetic in Trinidad Carnival. I</p><p>explore how the predominance of women in Carnival since the 1970s and the bikinibased costume aesthetic that complements this change is suggestive of women's urgent need to manipulate the body as an aesthetic medium and site of subversion. Critical to</p><p>this argument is a close examination of certain female figures who have had a sustainable presence in Trinidad Carnival's history. My project acknowledges the <italic>jamette</italic>, a working class woman who defied Victorian tenets of decorum in preindependence</p><p>Trinidad. This figure has been overlooked in the predominant scholarship of Trinidad Carnival history. Another section of my dissertation explores the influence of the Jaycees Carnival Queen competition. Women of mostly European descent participated in this Carnival-themed beauty pageant that remained popular until the</p><p>1970s. I also examine the legend of <italic>soucouyant</italic> (an old woman who turns into a ball of fire at night and sucks the life blood from unsuspecting victims) and how this figure can be deployed to reinterpret <italic>Jouvay</italic> (the ritual that marks the beginning of Trinidad Carnival).</p>DissertationPowell, Richard2009Dissertation81083459 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/1646en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Art History
Caribbean Studies
Caribbean Art
Festival Studies
Gender Studies
Performance Art
Visual Studies
spellingShingle Art History
Caribbean Studies
Caribbean Art
Festival Studies
Gender Studies
Performance Art
Visual Studies
Noel, Samantha A.
Carnival Is Woman!: Gender, Performance, and Visual Culture in Contemporary Trinidad Carnival
description <p>While great strides have been made in the study of Trinidad Carnival, there has yet to be a robust inquiry into how women have contributed to its evolution. One major reason for this shortcoming is that the dominant cultural discourse relies on a reductive</p><p>dichotomy that recognizes the costumes created prior to the 1970s as creative and those made after the 1970s as uncreative. This arbitrary division of the costume aesthetic reflects a distinct anti-feminist bias that sees women's spirited emergence in Carnival</p><p>territory in the 1970s as apolitical. </p><p>My dissertation exposes this dilemma, and seeks to undermine this</p><p>interpretation, by its focus on how women's bodies, their presentation, and their acknowledgment of the body's potential for non-verbal articulation impacted the evolution of performance practices and the costume aesthetic in Trinidad Carnival. I</p><p>explore how the predominance of women in Carnival since the 1970s and the bikinibased costume aesthetic that complements this change is suggestive of women's urgent need to manipulate the body as an aesthetic medium and site of subversion. Critical to</p><p>this argument is a close examination of certain female figures who have had a sustainable presence in Trinidad Carnival's history. My project acknowledges the <italic>jamette</italic>, a working class woman who defied Victorian tenets of decorum in preindependence</p><p>Trinidad. This figure has been overlooked in the predominant scholarship of Trinidad Carnival history. Another section of my dissertation explores the influence of the Jaycees Carnival Queen competition. Women of mostly European descent participated in this Carnival-themed beauty pageant that remained popular until the</p><p>1970s. I also examine the legend of <italic>soucouyant</italic> (an old woman who turns into a ball of fire at night and sucks the life blood from unsuspecting victims) and how this figure can be deployed to reinterpret <italic>Jouvay</italic> (the ritual that marks the beginning of Trinidad Carnival).</p> === Dissertation
author2 Powell, Richard
author_facet Powell, Richard
Noel, Samantha A.
author Noel, Samantha A.
author_sort Noel, Samantha A.
title Carnival Is Woman!: Gender, Performance, and Visual Culture in Contemporary Trinidad Carnival
title_short Carnival Is Woman!: Gender, Performance, and Visual Culture in Contemporary Trinidad Carnival
title_full Carnival Is Woman!: Gender, Performance, and Visual Culture in Contemporary Trinidad Carnival
title_fullStr Carnival Is Woman!: Gender, Performance, and Visual Culture in Contemporary Trinidad Carnival
title_full_unstemmed Carnival Is Woman!: Gender, Performance, and Visual Culture in Contemporary Trinidad Carnival
title_sort carnival is woman!: gender, performance, and visual culture in contemporary trinidad carnival
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/1646
work_keys_str_mv AT noelsamanthaa carnivaliswomangenderperformanceandvisualcultureincontemporarytrinidadcarnival
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