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From Blackface to ‘Genuine Negroes’: Nineteenth-Century Minstrelsy and the Icon of the ‘Negro’
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 January 2009
Extract
In 1855, the first ‘coloured’ minstrel troupe, the Mocking Bird Minstrels, appeared on a Philadelphia stage. While this company did not stay together long, it heralded a change in the ‘face’ of minstrelsy in the United States. Many other black minstrel troupes would quickly follow, drawing attention away from the white minstrels who had until then dominated the scene. However, the white minstrel show had already iconized a particular representation of the ‘Negro’, which ultimately paved the way for black anti-minstrel attitudes at the end of the nineteenth century. The minstrel show existed in two guises: the white-in-blackface, and the black-in-blackface. The form and content of the minstrel shows changed over time, as well as audience perception of the two different types of performance. The black minstrel show has come to be regarded as a ‘reclaiming’ of slave dance and performance. It differs from white minstrelsy in that it gave theatrical form to ‘signifyin” on white minstrelsy in the manner in which slaves practised ‘signifyin” on whites in real life.
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References
Notes
1. Robert, C.Toll documents this event in Blacking Up: The Minstrel Show in Nineteenth-Century America (New York: Oxford University Press, 1974).Google Scholar
2. Ibid., p. 34.
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15. The first of these groups, the Fisk Jubilee Singers, was initially mistaken for minstrel performers; however, they sang spirituals and religious music exclusively, and had none of the comedy of the minstrel show.
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23. Ibid.
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