This summarizes a document discussing Paul Gilroy's essay "The Black Atlantic as a Counterculture of Modernity". Gilroy examines black cultural production across the Atlantic world from a transnational perspective, challenging nationalist views that see black and white cultural experiences as separate. He argues the ship served as a contact zone where European, African, Native American, and Asian cultures interacted despite brutality like slavery. Gilroy positions the "black Atlantic" as a counterculture that disrupted modernity through cultural exchange and diasporic identities spanning continents.
This summarizes a document discussing Paul Gilroy's essay "The Black Atlantic as a Counterculture of Modernity". Gilroy examines black cultural production across the Atlantic world from a transnational perspective, challenging nationalist views that see black and white cultural experiences as separate. He argues the ship served as a contact zone where European, African, Native American, and Asian cultures interacted despite brutality like slavery. Gilroy positions the "black Atlantic" as a counterculture that disrupted modernity through cultural exchange and diasporic identities spanning continents.
This summarizes a document discussing Paul Gilroy's essay "The Black Atlantic as a Counterculture of Modernity". Gilroy examines black cultural production across the Atlantic world from a transnational perspective, challenging nationalist views that see black and white cultural experiences as separate. He argues the ship served as a contact zone where European, African, Native American, and Asian cultures interacted despite brutality like slavery. Gilroy positions the "black Atlantic" as a counterculture that disrupted modernity through cultural exchange and diasporic identities spanning continents.
This summarizes a document discussing Paul Gilroy's essay "The Black Atlantic as a Counterculture of Modernity". Gilroy examines black cultural production across the Atlantic world from a transnational perspective, challenging nationalist views that see black and white cultural experiences as separate. He argues the ship served as a contact zone where European, African, Native American, and Asian cultures interacted despite brutality like slavery. Gilroy positions the "black Atlantic" as a counterculture that disrupted modernity through cultural exchange and diasporic identities spanning continents.
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,rjun Appadurai
.IS, G. and M. Fisher. Anthropology As Cultural Critique: An fu-perimental
mmt in the Human Sciences. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1986. ~ l a r t , A. Transnationals and Third World: The Struggle for Culture. South dlcy, MA: Bergin and Garvey, 1983. )witz, J. No Semc of Place: 'DIe Impact of Electronic Media on Social Behavior. IV York: Oxford University Press, 1985. y, A. "The Political Culture of the Indian State." Daedaills 118.4 (1989): 1-26. I, F. "My Trip to Alice." Criticis111 J Heresy and Interpretation (CHAT) 3 (1989): -32. ;r, E. Golden Peaches of Samarkand: A Study of TJang Exotics. Berkeley: ivcrsity of Califomi a Press, 1963. ee, H. Communication and Cultural Dominati01I. White Plains, NY: Interna- lal Arts and Sciences, 1976. ltOll, R. u'The Rhetoric of Ethnographic Holism." Cultural Antbropology 3.3 19ust 1988): 285-303. lni, L. "Narrative, Pleasure and Ideology in the Hindi Film: An Analysis of the tsider Formula." M.A. Thesis, Anncnberg School of Communication, Univer- of Pennsylvania, 1989. rstein,1. The kfodern World-System (2 vols.). New York: Academic Press, 1974. :r, M. TIle Letters ofthe Republic: Publication fwd tbe Public Spbere. Cambridge, I.: Harvard Univcrsity Prcss (in press). ms, R. Keywords. New York: Oxford University Press, 1976. E. Europe and the People Witbout History. Berkeley: University of California ss, 1982. moto, M. "The Postmodcrn and Mass Images in Japan." Public Culture 1.2 '89): 8-25. i, P. "Repositioning the Body: An Indian Marcial Art and its Pan-Asian Publics." 'ducing tbe Postcolonial: Trajectories to Public Cult1tre itJ India. Ed. C. A. ckenridge (forthcoming). [Published as Consumillg Modernity: Public Cultllre 1 South Asian World. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1995.] 2 The Black Atlantic as a Counterculture of Modernity Paul Gilroy In this essay Paul Gilroy deploys cultural studies methods to examine black cultural production and to disrupt contemporary forms of cultural nationalism which, according to Gilroy," present immutable, ethnic differences as an absolute break in the histories and ex eriences of 'black' and 'white' eo Ie." For Gilroy, these forms 0 cu ural nationalism are grounded within rigid beliefs about "ethnic absolutism." . Moving away from nationalist and essentialist models of cultural production, Gilroy posits the "black Atlantic" as a transnational space of traversal, cultural exchange, production, and belonging, and demonstrates how well-known black individuals in Africa, Britain, the Caribbean, and the US (such as Phyllis Wheatley, Olaudah Equiano, Martin Delaney, W. E. B. Du Bois, C. L. R. James, George Padmore, Richard Wright, and others) have charted diasporic paths across this transnational terrain that spans several continents. In the movements of modernity (colonialist expansion:genocide, slavery, indenture), Gilroy argues, the ship is a chrenotope that marks the temporalities and fissures of the modern world; because European settlers and traders were not "sealed off hermetically" from the Native American, African, and Asian people they exterminated, colonized, enslaved, and Indentured, the "black Atlantic" (as a cultural contact zone) forms a counterculture to modernity.. This is an edited version of Gilroy's essay: [...J indicates where text has been omitted. We who are homeless - Among EtI"opeatls toda.v there is no lack of those who are entitled to ca71 themselves homeless in a distinctive and honourable sense . .. We children ofthe filtllre, how cotlld we be at home in this today? We feel disfavour for all ideals that might lead one to feel at home even in this fragile, broken time of transition; as f01' realities," we do not believe that the.v will last. The ice that still sttpports people toda.v has become 50 Paul Gilroy pery thin; the wind that brings the thaw is blowing; we ourselpes who are homeless constitute a force that breaks open icc and other all too thin "realities. " Nietzschc On the notion of modernity. It is a l'exed questzjm. Is not el'ery era modern in to the p"cceding It seems that at least Ol1e of the compol1ents of om' modernity is the sp"ead ofthc awareness we have ofit. The awareness ofour awareness (the double, the second degree) is 0111' S01i1'CC ofstrmgth and our torment. Edollard Glissmlt Striving to be both European and black requires some specific forms of double consciousness. By saying tlns I do not mean to suggest that taking on either or both of these unfinished identities necessarily exhausts the sub- jective resources of any particular individual. However, where racist, nation- alist, or ethnically absolutist discourses orchestrate political relationships so that these identities appear to be mutually exclusive, occupying the space betwecn them or trying to demonstrate their continuity has been viewed as a provocative and even oppositional act of political insubordination. The contemporary black English, like the Anglo-Africans of earlier gen- erations, and perhaps like all blacks in the West, stand between (at least) two great cultural assemblages, both of which have mutated through the course of the modern world that formed them and assumed new configurations. At present, tlley remain locked symbiotically in an antagonistic relationship marked out by the symbolism ofcolors which adds to the central Manichean dynamic - black and white. These colors support a special rhetoric that has grown to be associated \vith a language of nationality and national belong- ing as well as the languages of "race" and ethnic identity. Though largely ignored by recent debates over modernity and its dis- coments, these ideas about nationality, ethnicity, authenticity, and cultural integrity arc characteristically modern phenomena that have profound impli- cations for cultural criticism and cultural history. They crystallized with the revolutionary transformations of the West at the end of the eighteenth and the beginning of the nineteenth centuries and involved novel typologies and modes of identification. Any shift towards a postmodern condition should not, however, mean that the conspicuous power of these modern subjectiv- ities and the movements they articulated has been left behind. Their power has, if anything, grown, and their ubiquity as a means to make political sense of the world is currently unparalleled by the languages of class and socialism by which they once appeared to have been surpassed. My concern here is The Black Atlantic 51 less with explaining their longevity and enduring appeal than with exploring some of the special political problems that arise from the fatal junction of the concept of nationality with the concept of culture and the affinities and affiliations which link the blacks ofthe West to one oftheir adoptive, parental cultures: the intellectual heritage ofthe West since the Enlightenment. I have become fascinated with how successive generations of black intellectuals have understood this connection and how they have projected it in their writing and speaking in pursuit of freedom, citizenship, and social and political autonomy. If this appears to be little more than a roundabout way of saying that the reflexive cultures and consciousness of the European settlers and those of the Africans they enslaved, the they slaughtered, and the Asians they indentured were not, even in situations of the most extrerhe brutality sealed off hermetically from each otller, then so be it. This Seems as it ought to be an obvious and self-evident observation, but its stark charac- ter has been systematically obscured by commentators from all sides of polit- ical opinion. Regardless oftlleir affiliation to the right, left, or center, groups have fallen back on the idea of cultural nationalism, on the overintegrated conceptions of culture which present immutable, ethnic ditlcrences as an absolute break in the histories and experiences of "black" and "white" people. Against this choice stands another, more difficult option: the theo- rization of creolization, 111ctissage, mestizajc, and hybridity. From the vicw- point of ethnic absolutism, this would be a litany of pollution and impurity. These terms are rather unsatisfactory ways of naming the processes of cul- tural mutation and restless (dis)continuity that exceed racial discourse and avoid capture by its agents. [ ...] My concerns at this stage arc primarily conceptual: I have tried to address the continuing lure of in ctM.tural criticism produced both by blacks and by whites. In particular, this chapter seeks to explore the special relationships between "race," culture, nationality, and ethnicity which have a bearing on the histories and political cultures of Britain's black citizens. I have argued elsewhere tllat the cultures of this group have becn produced in a syncretic pattern in which the styles and forms of the Caribbean, the United States, and Africa have been reworked and reinscribed in the novel context of modern Britain's own untidy ensemble of regional and c1ass- oriented conflicts. Rather than make the invigorating flux of those mongrel cultural forms my focal concern here, I want instead to look at broader questions of ethnic identity that have contributed to the scholarship and the political strategies that Britain's black settlers have generated and to the underlying sense of England as a cohesive cultural community against which their self-conception has so often been defined. Here the ideas of nation, 52 Paul Gilroy nationality, national belonging, and nationalism arc paramount. They are extensively supported by a dutch of rhetorical strategies that can be named "cultural insiderism."1 The esscntial trademark of cultural insiderism which also supplies the key to its popularity is an absolute sensc of ethnic cnce. This is maximized so that it distinguishes people from one another and at the same time acquires an incontestable priority over all other dimensions of their social and historical experience, cultures, and. identities. Character- istically, these claims are associated with the idea of national belonging or the aspiration to nationality and other more local but equivalent forms of cultural kinship. The range and complexity of these ideas in English cultural life defies simple summary or exposition. However, the forms of cultural insidcrism they sanction typically construct the nation as an ethnically geneous object and invoke ethnicity a second time in the hermcneutic pro- cedures deployed to make sense of its distinctive cultural content. The intellectual scam in which English cultural studies has positioned itsclt:""-through innovative work in the fields of social history and literary criticism-can be indicted here. The statist modalities ofMarxist analysis that view modes of material production and political domination as exclusively national entities arc only one source of this problem. Another factor, more evasive but nonetheless potent for its intangible ubiquity, is a quiet cultural nationalism which pervades the work of some radical thinkers. This crypto- nationalism means that they are often disinclined to consider the cross- catalytic or transverse dynamics of racial politics as a significant element in the formation and reproduction of English national identities. These forma- tions are treated as if they spring, fully formed, from their own special viscera. My search for resources with which to comprehend the doubleness and cultural intermixture that distinguish the experience of black Britons in contemporary Europe required me to seek inspiration from other sources and, in effect, to make an intellectual journey across the Atlantic. In black America's histories of cultural and political debate and organization I found another, second perspective with which to orient my own position. Here too the lure of ethnic particularism and nationalism has provided an ever-present danger. But that narrowness of vision which is content with the merely national has also been challenged from within that black community by thinkers who were prepared to renounce the easy claims of Afiican- American exceptionalism in favor of a global, coalitional politics in which anti-imperialism and anti-racism might be seen to interact if not to fuse. [... ] I have settled on the image of ships in motion across the spaces between Europe, America, Africa, and the Caribbean as a central organizing symbol for this enterprise and as my starting point. The image of the ship - a living, microcultural, micropolitical system in motion - is especially impor- tant for historical and theoretical reasons that I hope will become clearer The Black Atlantic 53 below. Ships immediately focus attention on the .Middle Passage, on the various projects for redemptive return to an African homeland, on the cir- culation of ideas and activists as well as the movement of key cultural and political artifacts: tracts, books, gramophone records, and choirs. [..J Cultural Studies in Black and White Any satisfaction to be experienced from the recent spectacular growth of cultural studies as an academic project should not obscure its conspicuous problems with ethnocentrism and nationalism. Understanding these diffi- culties might commence with a critical evaluation of the ways in which notions ofethnicity have been mobilized, often by default rather than design, as part ofthe distinctive hermeneutics ofcultural studies or with the ing assumption that cultures always flow into patterns congruent with the borders of essentially homogeneous nation-states. The marketing and inevitable reification ofcultural studies as a discrete academic subject also has what might be called a secondary ethnic aspect. The project of cultural studies is a more or less attractive candidate for institutionalization accord- ing to the ethnic garb in which it appears. The question of whose cultures are being studied is therefore an important one, as is the issue of where the:;: instruments which will make that study possible are going to come from. In these circumstances it is hard not to wonder how much of the recent inter- national enthusiasm for cultural studies is generated by its profound associ- ations with England and ideas of Englishness. This possibility can be used as a point of entry into consideration of the ethnohistorical specificity of the discourse of cultural studies itself. Looking at cultural studies from an ethnohistorical perspective requires more than just noting its association with English literature, history, and New Left politics. It necessitates constructing an account of the borrowings made by these English initiatives from wider, modern, European traditions of thinking about culture, and at every stage examining the place which these cultural perspectives provide for the images of their racialized 2 others as objects of knowledge, power, and cultural criticism. It is imperative, though very hard, to combine thinking about these issues with consideration of the pressing need to get black cultural expressions, analyses, and histories taken seriously in academic circles, rather tl1an assigned via the idea of "race rela- tions" to sociology and thence abandoned to the elephants' graveyard to which intractable policy issues go to await their expiry. These two imeor- tant conversations pull in different directions and sometimes threaten to other out, but It IS the 54 Paul Gilroy as ,vith cognitive capacities and eveD-with all _ attnbutes de!1ied, racism - that is for me the rimar reason for '.] It proVides a vawa15rC'\varran or questioning some 0 1C ways in which ethnicity is appealed to in the English idioms of cultural theory and history, and in the scholarly productions of black America. Understanding the political culture of blacks in Britain demands close attention to both these traditions. [... ] ,. Histories of cultural studies seldom acknowledge how the politically radical and openly interventionist aspirations found in the best of its schol- arship are already articulated to black cultural history and theory. These links arc rarely seen or accorded any significance. In England the work of figures like C. L. R. James and Stuart Hall offers a wealth of both symbols and con crete evidence for the practical links between these critical political projects. In the United States thc work of interventionist scholars like bell hooks and Cornel West as well as that of morc orthodox academics like Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Houston A. Baker, Jr., Anthony Appiah, and Hazel Carby, points to similar convergences. The position of these thinkers in the contested "contact zones,,3 between cultures and histories is not, however, as excep- tional as it might appear at first. We shall see below that successive genera tions of black intellectuals (especially those whose lives, like James's, crisscrossed the Atlantic Ocean) noted this intercultural positionality and accorded it a special significance before launching their distinct modes of cultural and political critique. They were often urged on in their labor by the brutal absurdity of racial classification that derives frOI11 and also cele- brates racially exclusive conceptions of national identity from which blacks were excluded as either non-humans or non-citizens. I shall try to show that their marginal endeavors point to some new analytic possibilities with a general significance far beyond the wellpoliced borders of black particular- ity. For example, this body of work offers intermediate concepts, lodged between the local and the global, which have a wider applicability in cultural history and politics precisely because they offer an alternative to the nation- alist focus which dominates cultural criticism. [... ] Getting beyond these national and nationalistic perspectives has become essential for two additional reasons. The first arises from the urgent obliga- tion to reevaluate the significance of thc modern nationstate as a political, economic, and cultural unit. Neither political nor economic structures of domination are still simply coextensive with national borders. This has a special significance in contemporary Europe, where new political and eco nomic relations arc being crcated seemingly day by day, but it is a wide phcnomenon with significant consequences for the relationship between the politics of information and the practices of capital accumula- tion. Its effects underpin more recognizably political changes like the The Black Atlantic 55 growing centrality of transnational ecological movements which, through their insistence on the association of sustainability and justice, do so much to shift the moral and scientific precepts on which the modern separation of politics and ethics was built. The second reason relates to the tragic popu- larity of ideas about the integrity and purity of cultures. In particular, it con cems the relationship between nationality and ethnicity. This too currently has a special force in Europe, bur it is also reflected directly in the post- colonial histories and complex, transcultural, poIitil:al trajcctoJies of Britain's black settlers. What might be called the peculiarity of the black English rcquires atten- tion to the intermixture of a variety of distinct cultural forms. Previously separated political and intellectual traditions converged and, in their coming together, overdetermined the process of black Britain's social and historical formation. TillS blending is misunderstood if it is conceived in simple ethnic terms, but right and left, racist and anti-racist, black and white tacitly share a view of it as little more than a collision between fully formed and mutu" exclusive cultural communities. This has become the dominant view where black history and cululre are perceived, like black settlers themselves, as an illegitimate intrusion into a vision ofauthentic British national life that, prior to their arrival, was as stable and as peaceful as it was ethnically undif- ferentiated. [...] However, though it arises from present rather than past conditions, contemporary British racism bears the imprint ofthe past in many ways. The especially crude and reductive notions of culture that form the substance of racial politics today are clearly associated with an older discourse of racial and ethnic difference which is everywhere entangled in the history of the idea of culture in the modern West. This history has itself become hotly contested since debates about multiculturalism, cultural pluralism, and the responses to them that are sometimes dismissivcly called "'political cor- rectness" arrived to query the ease and speed with which European partic- ularisms arc still being translated into absolute, universal standards tor human achievement, norms, and aspirations. It is significant that prior to the consolidation of scientific racism in the nineteenth cemury/ the term was used very much in the way that the word "culture" is used today. But in the attempts to differentiate the true, the good, and the beautiful which characterize the junction point of capital- ism, industrialization, and political democracy and give substance to the dis- course of Western modernity, it is important to appreciate that scientists did not monopolize either the image of the black or the emergent concept of biologically based racial difference. As far as the future of cultural studies is concerned, it should be equally important that both were centrally employed in those European attempts to think through beauty, taste, and aesthetic judgment that arc the precursors of contemporary cultural criticism. 56 Paul Gilroy Tracing the racial signs from which the discourse of cultural value was constructed, and their conditions of existence in relation to European aes- thetics and philosophy, as well as European science, can contribute much to an ethnohistorical reading ofthe aspirations of Western modernity as a whole and to the critique of Enlightenment assumptions in particular. It is certainly the case that ideas about "race," ethnicity, and nationality form an impor- tant scam ofcontinuity linking English cultural studies with one ofits sources of inspiration - the doctrines of modern European aesthetics that are con sistently configured by the appeal to national and often racial particularity.5 This is not the place to go deeply into the broader dimensions of this intellectual inheritance. Valuable work has already been done by Sander Gilman,6 Henry Louis Gates, Ir./ and others on the history and role of the image of the black in the discussions which found modern cultural axiology; Gilman points out usefully that the figure of the black appears in different forms in the aesthetics of Hegel, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche (among others) as a marker for moments of cultural relativism and to support the production of aesthetic judgments of a supposedly universal character to dif ferentiate, for example, between authentic music and, as Hegel puts it, "the most detestable noise." Gates emphasizes a complex genealogy in which ambiguities in Montesquieu's discussion of slavery prompt responses in Hume that can be related, in turn, to philosophical debates over the nature of beauty and sublimity found in the work of Burke and Kant. Critical eval- uation of these representations of blackness might also be connected to the controversies over the place of racism and anti-Semitism in the work of Enlightenment figures like Kant and Voltaire. 8 [ ..JNor should important inquiries into the contiguity of racialized reason and unreasonable racism be dismissed as trivial matters. These issues go to the heart of contemporary debates about what constitutes the canon of Western civilization and how this precious legacy should be taught. In these embattled circumstances it is regrettable that questions of "race" and representation have been so regularly banished from orthodox histories of Western aesthetic judgment, taste, and cultural value. 9 There is a plea here that further inquiries should be made into precisely how discussions of "race," and culture have contributed to the critical think- ing that eventually gave rise to cultural studies. The use of the concept of fetishism in Marxism and psychoanalytic studies is one obvious means to open up this problem. 1O The emphatically national character ascribed to the concept of modes of production (cultural and otherwise) is another funda- mental question which demonstrates the ethnohistorical specificity of dom- inant approaches to cultural politics, social movements, and oppositional consciollsnesses. These general issues appear in a specific form in the distinctive English idioms of cultural reflection. Here the moral and political problem of The Black Atlantic 57 slavery loomed large, not least because it was once recognized as internal to the structure of Western civilization and appeared as a central political and philosophical concept in the emergent discourse of modern English cul- tural uniqueness." Notions ofthe primitive and the civilized which had been integral to premodern understanding of "ethnic" differences became funda- mental cognitive and aesthetic markers in the processes which generated a constellation of subject positions in which Englishness, Christianity, and other ethnic and racialized attributes would finally give way to the dislocat- ing dazzle of "whiteness, ,,{2 A small but telling insight into this can be: found in Edmund Burke's discussion of the sublime, which has achieved a certain currency lately. He makes elaborate use of the association of darkness with blackness, linking them to the skin of a real, live black woman. Seeing her produces a sublime feeling of terror in a boy whose sight has been restored to him by a surgical operation. Perhaps it may appear on that blackness and darkness arc in,some degree painful by their natural operation, independent ofany associations ,.... hat- ever. I must observe that the ideas of blackness and darkness arc much the same; and they differ only in this, that blackmess is a more confined idea. Mr Chesdden has given us a vcry curious story of boy who had been born blind, and continued so until he was thirteen or fourteen years old; he was then couched for a cataract, by which operation he received his sight ... Cheselden tells us that the first time the boy saw a black object, it gave him great uneasiness; and that some time after, upon accidentally seeing a negro woman, he was struck with great horror at the sighr. 13 Burke, who opposed slavery and argued for its gradual abolition, stands at the doorway ofthe tradition of inquiry mapped by Raymond Williams which is also the infrastructure on which much of English cultural studies came to be founded. This origin is part of the explanation of how some of the con- temporary manifestations of this tradition lapse into what can only be called a morbid celebration of England and Englishness. These modes of subjec- tivity and identification acquire a renewed political charge in the post- imperial history that saw black settlers from Britain's colonies take up their citizenship rights as subjects in the United Kingdom. The cntry of blacks into national life was itself a powerful factor contributing to the circum- stances in which the formation of both cultural studies and New Left tics became possible. It indexes the profound transformations ofBritish social and cultural life in the 1950s and stands, again usually unacknowledged, at the heart of laments for a more human scale of social living that seemed no longer practicable after the 1939-45 war. The convoluted history of black settlement need not be recapitulated here. One recent fragment from it, the struggle over Salman Rushdie's book TIJe Sata"ic l'e,'ses, is sufficient to demonstrate that racializcd conflict over 58 Paul Gilroy the meaning of English culture is still very much alive and to show that these antagonisms have become enmeshed in a second series of struggles in which Enlightenment assumptions about culture, cultural value, and aesthetics go on being tested by those who do not accept them as universal moral stan- dards. These conflicts are, in a sense, the outcome of a distinct historical period in which a new, ethnically absolute and racism was pro- duced. It would explain the burning of books on English streets as mani- festations of irreducible cultural differences that signposted the path to domestic racial catastrophe. This new racism was generated in part by the move towards a political discourse which aligned ""race" closely with the idea of national belonging and which stressed complex cultural difference rather than simple biological hierarchy. These strange conflicts emerged in circum- stances where blackness and Englishness appeared suddenly to be mutually exclusive attributes and where the conspicuous antagonism between them proceeded on the terrain of culture, not that of politics. Whatever view of Rushdie one holds, his fate offers another small, but significant omen of the extent to which the almost metaphysical values of England and Englishness are currently being contested through their connection to "race" and eth- nicity. His experiences are also a reminder of the difficulties involved in attempts to construct a more pluralistic, postcolonial sense of British culture and national idemity. In this context, locating and answering the national- ism if not the racism and ethnocentrism of English cultural studies has itself become a directly political issue. Returning to the imperial figures who supplied Raymond Williams with the raw material for his own brilliant critical reconstruction of English intel- lectual life is instructive. Apart from Burke, Thomas Carlyle, John Ruskin, Charles Kingsley, and the rcst of Williams's cast of worthy characters can become valuable not simply in attempts to purge cultural studies of its doggedly ethnocentric focus, but in the more ambitious and more usefitl task of actively reshaping contemporary England by reinterpreting the cultural core of its supposedly authentic national life. In the work of rein- terpretation and reconstruction, reinscription and relocation required to transform England and Englishness, discussion of the cleavage in the Victorian intelligentsia around the response to Governor Eyre's handling of the Morant Bay Rebellion in Jamaica in 1865 is likely to be prominent. lot Like the English responses to the 1857 uprising in India examined by Jenny Sharpe,15 it may well turn out to be a much more formative moment than has so far been appreciated. Morant Bay is doubly significant because it rep- resents an instance of metropolitan, internal conflict that emanates directly from an external colonial experience. These crises in imperial power demon- strate their continuity. It is part of my argument that this inside/outside rela- tionship should be recognized as a more powerful, more complex, and more The Black Atlantic 59 contested clement in the historical, social, and cultural memory of our glo- rious nation than has previously been supposed. I am suggesting that even the laudable, radical vatieties of English cul- tural sensibility examined by Williams and celebrated by Edward Thompson and others were not produced spontaneously from their own internal and intrinsic dynamics. The fuct that some of the most potent conceptions of Englishness have been constructed by alien outsiders like Carlyle, Swift, Scott, or Eliot should augment the note of caution sounded here. The most heroic, subaltern English nationalisms and coulltercultural patriotisms arc perhaps better understood as having been generated in a complex pattern of antagonistic relationships with the supranational and imperial world for which the ideas of "race," nationality, and national culture provide the primary (though not the only) indices. This approach would obviously bring William Blake's work into a rather different focus from that supplied by orthodox cultural history, and, as Peter Linebaugh has suggested, this overdue reassessment can be readily complemented by charting the long- neglected involvement of black slaves and their descendants in the radical history of our country in general and its working-class movements in par- ticular. 16 Olaudah Equiano, whose involvement in the beginnings of organ- ized working-class politics is now being widely recognized; the anarchist, Jacobin, ultra-radical, and Methodist heretic Robert Wedderburn; William Davidson, son of Jamaica's attorney general, hanged for his role in the Cato Street conspiracy to blow up the British cabinet in 1819;17 and the Chartist William Cuffay arc only the most urgent, obvious candidates for rehabilita- tion. Their lives offer invaluable means of seeing how thinking ,vith and through the discourses and the imagery of "race" appears in the core rather than at the frihges of English political life. Davidson's speech from the scaffold before being subject to the last public decapitation in England is, for example, one moving appropriation of the rights of dissident freeborn Englishmen that is not widely read today. Of this infamous trio, Wedderburn is perhaps the best known, thanks to the efforts of Peter Linebaugh and lain McCalman. IS The child of a slave dealer, James Wedderburn, and a slave woman, Robert was brought up by a Kingston conjure woman who acted as an agent for smugglers. He migrated to London at the age of seventeen in 1778. There, having pub- lished a number of disreputable ultra-radical tracts as part of his subversive political labors, he presented himself as a living embodiment of the horrors of slavery in a debating chapel in Hopkins Street ncar the Haymarket, where he preached a version of chiliastic anarchism based on the teachings of Thomas Spence and infused with deliberate blasphemy. In one of the debates held in his "ruinous hayloft with 200 persons of the lowest description," Wedderburn defended the inherent rights of the Caribbean slave to slay his 60 Paul Gilroy master, promising to write home and "tell them to murder their masters as soon as they please." After this occasion he was tried and acquitted on a charge of blasphemy after persuading the jury that he had not been utter- ing sedition but merely practicing the "true and infallible genius ofprophetic skill. ,,19 It is particularly significant for the direction of l!ly overall argument that both Wedderburn and his sometime associate Davidson had been sailors, moving to and fro between nations, crossing borders in modern machines that were themselves microsysterns of linguistic and political hybridity. Their relationship to the sea rna turn out to be es ectalIy Important for both the car y olitics an poetics of the black Atlanti WIS er- p()se agamst e narr natIonalism of so much English historiography. Wedderburn served m the Royal Navy and as a privateer, while Davidson, who ran away to sea instead of studying law, was pressed into naval service on two subsequent occasions. Davidson inhabited the same ultra-radical subculture as Wedderburn and was an active participant in the Marylebonc Reading Society, a radical body furmed in 1819 after the Petcrloo massacre. He is known to have acted as the custodian of their black flag, which sig- nificantly bore a skull and crossbones with the legend "Let us die like men and not be sold as slaves," at an openair meeting in Smithfield later that year. 20 The precise details of how radical ideologies articulated the culture of the London poor before the institution of the factory system to the insub- ordinate maritime culture of pirates and other pre-industrial workers of the world will have to await the innovative labors of Peter Linebaugh and Marcus Rediker. 21 However, it has been estimated that at the end of the eighteenth century a quarter of the British navy was composed of Africans for whom the experience of slavery was a powerful orientation to the ideologies of liberty and justice. Looking for similar patterns on the other side of the Atlantic network, we can locate Crispus Attucks at the head of his "motley rabble of saucy boys, negroes, mulattoes, Irish teagues and outlandish jack tars,,22 and can track Denmark Vesey sailing tlle Caribbean and picking up inspirational stories of the Haitian revolution (one of his co-conspirators testified that he had said they would "not spare one white skin alive for this was the plan they pursued in San Domingo").23 There is also the shining example of Frederick Douglass, whose autobiographies reveal that he learnt of freedom in the North from Irish sailors while working as a ship's caulker in Baltimore. He had less to say about the embarrassing fact that the vessels he readied for the ocean - Baltimore Clippers - were slavers, tlle fastest ships in the world and the only craft capable of outrunning the British blockade. Douglass, who played a neglected role in English anti-slaver}r activity, escaped from bondage disguised as a sailor and put this success down to his ability to "talk sailor like an old salt.,,24 These are only a few of the The Black Atlantic 61 nineteentll-century examples. The involvement of Marcus Garvey, George Padmore, Claude McKay, and Langston Hughes with ships and sailors lends additional support to Linebaugh's prescient suggestion that "the ship remained perhaps the most important conduit of Pan-African communica- tion before the appearance of the long-playing record...25 Ships and other maritime scenes have a special place in the work of J. M. W. Turner, an artist whose pictures represent, in the view of many contem- porary critics, the pinnacle of achievement in the English school in painting. Any visitor to London will testify to the importance of the Clore Gallery as a national institution and of the place of Turner's art as an enduring expres- sion of the very essence of English civilization. Turner was secured on the summit of critical appreciation by John Ruskin, who, as we haveseen, occu- pies a special place in Williams's constellation of great Englishmen. Turner's celebrated picture of a slave ship26 thrO\ving overboard its dead and dying as a storm comes on w ~ s exhibited at the Royal Academy to coincide with the world anti-slavery convention held in London in 1840. The picture, owned by Ruskin for some twentyeight years, was rather more than an answer to the absentee Caribbean landlords who had commissioned its creator to record the tainted splendor of their country houses, which, as Patrick Wright has eloquently demonstrated, became an important signifier of the contem- porary, ruralist distillate of nationallifeY It offered a powerful protest against the direction and moral tone of English politics. This was made explicit in an epigraph Turner took from his own poetry and which has itself retained a political inflection: '"Hope, hope, fallacious hope where is thy market now?" Three years after his extensive involvement in the campaign to defend Governor Eyre/ 8 Ruskin put the slave ship painting up for sale at Christie's. It is said that he had begun to find it too painful to live \vith. No buyer was found at that timc, and he sold the picture to an American thrce years later. The painting has remained in the United States ever since. Its exile in Boston is yet another pointer towards the shape of the Atlantic as a system of cul- tural exchanges. It is more important, though, to draw attention to Ruskin's inability to discuss the picture except in terms of what it revealed about the aesthetics of painting water. He relegated tlle information that the vessel was a slave ship to a footnote in the first volume of Modern Pail1ters. 29 In spite oflapses like this, the New Left heirs to the aesthetic and cultural tradition in which Turner and Ruskin stand compounded and reproduced its nationalism and its ethnocentrism by denying imaginary, invented Eng- lishness any external referents whatsoever. England ceaselessly gives birth to itself, seemingly from Britannia's head. The political affiliations and cultural preferences of this New Left group amplified these problems. They are most visible and most intense in the radical historiography that supplied a coun- terpart to Williams's subtle literary reflections. For all their enthusiasm for 62 Paul Gilroy the work of C. L. R. James, the influential British Communist Party's historians' group is culpable here. 30 Their predilections for the image of the freeborn Englishman and the dream of socialism in one country that framed their work are both to be found wanting when it comes to nation- alism. This uncomfortable pairing can be traced through the work of Edward Thompson and Eric Hobsbawm, visionary writers wDO contributed so much to the strong foundations of English cultural studies and who share a non- reductive Marxian approach to economic, social, and cultural history in which the nation - understood as a stable receptacle for coumer-hegemonic class struggle - is the primary focus. These problems within English cultural studies form at its junction point with practical politics and instantiate wider difficulties with nationalism and with the discursive slippage or connotative resonance between "race," ethnicity, and nation. Similar problems appear in rather different form in African-American letters where an equally volkish popular cultural nationalism is featured in the work of several generations of radical scholars and an equal number of not so radical ones. We will sec below that absolutist conceptions of cultural difference allied to a culturalist understanding oP'race" and ethnicity can be found in this location too. In opposition to both of these nationalist or ethnically absolute approaches, I want to develop the suggestion that cultural historians could take the Atlantic as one single, complex unit of analysis in their discussions of the modern world and use it to produce an explicitly transnational and intercultural perspective. 31 Apart from the confrontation with English histo- riography and literary history this entails a challenge to the ways in which black American cultural and political histories have so far been conceived. I want to suggest that much of the precious intellectual legacy claimed by African-American intellectuals as the substance of their particularity is in 'lct only partly their absolute ethnic property. No less than in the case of the English New Left, the idea of the black Atlantic can be used to show tllat there are other claims to it which can be based on the structure ofthe African diaspora into the Western hemisphere. A concern with the Atlantic as a cul- tural and political system has been forced on black historiography and intel- lectual history by tile economic and historical matrix in which plantation slavery - "capitalism with its clothes off" - was one special moment. The fractal patterns of cultural and political exchange and transformation tllat we try and specif}' through manifestly inadequate theoretical terms like cre- olization and syncretism indicate how both ethnicities and political cultures have been made anew in ways that are significant not simply for the peoples of the Caribbean but for Europe, for Africa, especially Liberia and Sierra Leone, and of course, for black America. It bears repetition that Britain's black settler communities have forged a compound culture from disparate sources. Elements of political sensibility The Black Atlantic 63 and cultural expression transmitted from black America over a long period of time have been reaccentuated in Britain. They arc central, though no longer dominant, within the increasingly novel configurations tllat charac- terize another newer black vernacular culture. This is not content to be either dependent upon or simply imitative of the African diaspora cultures of America and the Caribbean. The rise and rise of Jazzie B and Soul II Soul at the turn of the last decade constituted one valuable sign of this new assertive mood. North London's Funki Dreds, whose name itself projects a newly hybridized identity, have projected the distinct culture and rhythm of life of black Britain outwards into the world. Their song "Keep On Moving" was notable for having been produced in England by the children of Caribbean settlers and then remixed in a (Jamaican) dub for"mat in the United States by Teddy Riley, an African American. It included segments or samples of music taken from American and Jamaican records by the JBs and Mikey Dread respectively. This formal unity of diverse cultural elements was more than just a powerful symbol. It encapsulated the playful diasporic inti- macy that has been a marked feature of transnational black Atlantic creativ- ity. The record and its extraordinary popularity enacted the tics of affiliation and affect which articulated the discontinuous histories of black settlers in the new world. The fundamental injunction to "Keep On Moving" also expressed the restlessness of spirit which makes that diaspora culture vital. The contemporary black arts movement in film, visual arts, and theatre as well as music, which provided the background to this musical release, have created a new topography ofloyalty and identity in which tile structtlres and presuppositions of tile nation-state have been left behind because they are seen to be outmoded. It is important to remember that these recent black Atlantic phenomena may not be as novel as their digital encoding via the transnational force of north London's Soul II Soul suggests. Columbus's pilot, Pedro Nino, was also an Mrican. The history ofthe black Atlantic since then, continually crisscrossed by the movements of black people - not only as commodities but engaged in various struggles towards emancipation, autonomy, and citizenship - provides a means to reexamine the problems of nationality, location, identity, and historical memory. They all emerge from it with special clarity if we contrast the national, nationalistic, and ethnically absolute paradigms ofcultural criticism to be found in England and America \vith those hidden expressions, both residual and emergent, that attempt to be global or outer-national in nature. These traditions have supported coun tercultures of modernity that touched the workers' movement but are not reducible to it. They supplied important foundations on which it could build. Turner's extraordinary painting of tile slave ship remains a useful image not only for its self-conscious moral power and the striking way that it aims directly for the sublime in its invocation of racial terror, commerce, and England's cthico-political degeneration. It should be emphasized that ships 64 Paul Gilroy were the living means by which the oints within that Atlantic world were They were mo Ice ements that stoo or the shi ing spaces in between the fixed places that they connected. 32 Accordingly they need to be thought of as cultural and political units rather than abstract embodiments of the triangular trade. They were something more - a means to conduct political dissent and possibly a distinct mode of cultural production. The ship provides a chance to explore the articulations between the discontinuous histories of England's ports, its interfaces with the wider world. 33 Ships also refer us back to the Middle Passage, to the half-remembered micropolitics of the slave trade and its relationship to both industrialization and modern- ization. At; it were, getting on board promises a means to reconceptualize the orthodo. ionsl11 between modermty and what passes for Its re- history. It provides a different scnse 0 w erc mo erntty might itself be thought to begin in the constitutive relationships with olltsiders that both found and temper a self-conscious sense of Western civilization. 34 For all these reasons, the ship is the first of the novel chronoto es resupposed by my attempts to rethin VIa t e lstory of the black Atlantic aria. the African diaspora mto the Western hemIsphere. In the VCIltUlCSOiiiC spirit proposed by james Clifford in his influential work on culture,35 I want to consider the Jl11pact that this outer- . national, transcultural reconceptualization might have on the political and cultural history of black Americans and that of blacks in Europe. In recent history this will certainly mean reevaluating Garvey and Garveyism, pan Africanism, and Black Power as hemispheric if not global phenomena. In periodizing modern black politics it ,viII require fresh thinking about the importance of Haiti and its revolution for the development of African- American political thought and movements of resistance. From the Euro- pean side it ,viII no doubt be necessary to reconsider Frederick Douglass's relationship to English and Scottish radicalisms and to meditate on the sig- nificance of William Wells Brown's five years in Europe as a fugitivc slavc, on Alexander Crummell's living and studying in Cambridgc, and upon Martin Delany's experiences at the London congress of thc International Statistical Congrcss in 1860. 36 It will require comprehension of such diffi- cult and complex questions as W. E. B. Du Bois's childhood interest in Bis- marck, his investment in modeling his dress and moustache on that of Kaiser Wilhelm II, his likely thoughts while sitting in Heinrich Von Treitschke's scminars,37 and the use his tragic heroes make of European culture. Notable black American travelers, from the poet Phyllis Wheatley onwards, went to Europe and had their perceptions of America and racial domination shifted as a result of their expcriences there. This had important consequences for their understanding of racial identities. The radical jour- nalist and political organizer Ida B. Wells is typical, describing her produc- The Black Atlantic 65 tive times in England as like "being born again in a new condition. ,.38 Lucy Parsons is a more problematic figure in the political history of black America,39 but how might her encounters with William Morris, Annie Besant, and Peter Kropotkin impact upon a rewriting of the history of English radicalism? What of Nella Larsen's relationship to Denmark, whcre George Padmore was held in jail during the early 1930s and which was also the home base of his banned paper the Negro Worker, circulated across the world by its supporters in the Colonial Seamen's Association?40 'What of Sarah Parker Remond's work as a medical practitioner in Italy and the life of Edmonia Lewis, the sculptor, who made her home in Romd 41 What effects did living in Paris have upon Anna Cooper, Jessie Fauset, Gwendolyn Bennett,42 and Lois Maillou Jones? It would appear that there are large questions raised about the direction and character of black culture and art if we take the powerful effects of even temporary experiences of exile, relocation, and displacement into account. How, for example, was the course of the black vernacular art of jazz changed by what happened to Quincy Jones in Sweden and Donald Byrd in Paris? This is especially interesting because both men played powernI! roles in the remaking of jazz as a popular form in the early 19705. Byrd describes his sense of Europe's appeal as something that grew out of the view of Canada he developed as a young man growing up in Detroit: That's why Europe was so important to me. Living across the river from Canada as a kid, I used to go down and sit and look at Windsor, Ontario. Windsor represented Europe to me. That was the rest of the world that was foreign to me. So I always had a fecling for the foreign, the European thing, because Canada was right there. We used to go to Canada. For black people, you sec, Canada was a place that treated you better than America, the North. For my father Detroit was better than the South, to me born in the North, Canada was better. At least that was what I thought. Later on I found out otherwise, but anyway, Canada represented for me something foreign, exotic, that was not the United Statcs. 43 Richard Wright's life in exile ... has been written ofT as a betrayal of his authenticity and as a process of seduction by philosophical traditions sup- posedly outside his narrow ethnic compass,4-i ... an exemplary instance of how the politics oflocation and the politics ofidentity get inscribed in analy- ses of black culture. [ ...1They are all potential candidates for inclusion in the latest African-American cultural canon, a canon that is conditional on and possibly required by the academic packaging of black cultural studies. oJ !> [... ] Du Bois's travel experiences raise in the sharpest possible form a tion common to the lives of almost all these figures who begin as African Americans or Caribbean people and are then changed into something else 66 Paul Gilroy which evades those specific labels and with them all fixed notions of nation- ality and national identity. Whether their experience of exile is enforced or chosen) temporary or permanent, these intellectuals and activists writers speakers, poets, and artists repeatedly articulate a desire to escape the tive bonds of ethnicity, national identification, and sometimes even "race" itself. Some speak, like Wells and Wright, in terms o{ the rebirth that Europe offered them. Whether they dissolved their African-American sensibility into an explicitly pan-Africanist discourse or political commitment, their rela- tionship to the land of their birth and their ethnic political constituency was absolutely transformed. The specificity of the modern political and cultural formation I want to call the black Atlantic can be defined, on one level) through this desire to transcend both the structures of the nation-state and the constraints of ethnicity and national particularity. These desires are rele- vant to understanding political organizing and cultural criticism. They have always sat uneasily alongside the strategic choices forced on black movements and individuals embedded in national political cultures and nation-states in America, the Caribbean, and Europe. [... J Black Politics and Modernity [... ] The problem of weighing the claims of national identity against other contrasting varieties ofsubjectivity and identification has a special place in the intellectual history of blacks in the West. Du Bois's concept of double con- sciousness [ ... ] is only the best-known resolution ofa familiar problem which points towards the core dynamic of racial oppression as well as the funda- mental antinomy of diaspora blacks. How has this doubleness) what Richard Wright calls the dreadful objectivity46 which follows from being both inside and outside the West, affected the conduct of political movements against racial oppression and towards black autonomy? Are the inescapable plurali- ties involved in the movements of black peoples, in Mrica and in exile, ever to be synchronized? How would these struggles be periodized in relation to modernity: the fatal intermediation ofcapitalism) industrialization, and a new conception of political democracy? Does posing these questions in this way signifY anything more than the reluctant intellectual affiliation of diaspora blacks to an approach which mistakenly attempts a premature totalization of infinite struggles, an approach which itself has deep and problematic roots within the ambiguous intellectual traditions of the European Enlightenment which have, at different moments, been both a lifeline and a tetter? [Martin] Delany's work has prOvided some powerful evidence to show that the intellectual heritage of Euro-American modernity determined and The Black Atlantic 67 possibly still determines the manner in which nationality is understood within black political discourse. In particular) this legacy conditions the continuing aspiration to acquire a supposedly authentic) natural, and stable '"rooted" identity. This invariant identity is in turn the premise of a thinking 'racial" self that is both socialized and unified by its connection with other kindred souls encountered usually, though not always) \vithin the fortified frontiers of those discrete ethnic cultures which also happen to coincide with the contours of a sovereign nation-state that guarantees their continuity. Consider for a moment the looseness with which the term "black nation- alism" is used both by its advocates and by skeptics. Why is a more refined political language for dealing with these crucial issues of identity, kinship, generation, affect, and affiliation such a long time coming? Asmall but telling example can be drawn from the case of Edouard Glissant, who has con- tributed so much to the emergence of a creole that can answer the alchemy of nationalisms. Discussion of these problems suffers when his translator excises Glissanes references to the work of Dclel1ze and Guattari from the English edition of his 1981 book Le Discours al1ti/lais;S,7 presumably because to acknowledge this exchange would somehow violate the aura of Caribbean authenticity that is a desirable frame around the work. This typical refusal to accept the complicity and syncretic interdependency of black and white thinkers has recently become associated with a second difficulty: the overintegrated conceptions of pure and homo eneous culture which mean that es are construed as some QW auto- matically expressive of the national or ethnic differences with which they are associated. This overintegrated sense of cultural and ethnic particulari is ver to ay, an ac s 0 not monopo lze it. t mas - e. arbi:rariness of its own political choices in the morally charged language of ethlllc abso- llu:im1. and thiS poses addItional dangers because It overlookS the devel- opment and change of black political ideologies and ignores the restless, recombinant qualities of the black Atlantic's affirmative political cultures. The political project forged by thinkers like Delany in the ditlicult journey from slave ship to citizenship is in danger of being wrecked by the seemingly insoluble conflict between two distinct but currently symbiotic perspectives. They can be loosely identified as the essentialist and the pluralist standpoints) though they are in fact twO different varieties of essentialism: one ontolog- ical, the other strategic. The antagonistic relationship between these two out- looks has been especially intense in discussions of black art and cultural criticism. The ontological essentialist view has often been characterized by a brute pan-Afiicanism. It has proved unable to specifY precisely where the l;igfily pnzed but doggedly evasive essence of black artistic and political sen- sibility is currently located) but that is no obstacle to its popular circulation. 68 Paul Gilroy This perspective sees the black intellectual and artist as a leader. Where it pronounces On cultural matters, it is often allied to a realist approach to aes- thetic value that minimizes the substantive political and philosophical issues involved in the processes of artistic representation. Its absolutist conception of ethnic cultures can be identified by the way in which it registers uncom- prehending disappointment with the actual cultural fhoices and patterns of the mass of black people. It has little to say about the profune, contaminated world of black popular culture and looks instead for an artistic practice that can disabuse the mass of black people of the illusions into which they have been seduced by their condition of exile and unthinking consumption of inappropriate cultural objects like the wrong hair-care products, pop music, and Western clothing. The community is felt to be on the wrong road, and it is the intellectual's job to give them a new direction, firstly by recovering and then by donating the racial awareness that the masses seem to lack. Tllis perspective currently confronts a pluralistic position which affirms blackness as an open signifier and seeks to celebrate complex representations of a black particularity that is internally divided: by class, sexuality, gender, age, ethnicity, economics, and political consciousness. There is no unitary idea of black community here, and the authoritarian tendencies of those who would police black cultural expression in the name of their own particular history or priorities are rightly repudiated. The ontologically grounded essentialism is replaced by a libertarian, strategic altcrnativc: thc cultural sat- urnalia which attends the end of innocent notions of the essential black subject. 48 Here, the polyphonic qualities of black cuhllr 'on form the main aesthetic consi eranon an t lere is often an uneasy but exhi arat- ing fusion of modernist and populist techniques and styles. From this per- spective, the achievements of popular black cultural forms like music arc a constant source of inspiration. They are prized for their implicit warning against the pitfalls ofartistic conceit. The difficulty with this second tcndency is that in leaving racial essentialism behind by viewing "race" itself as a social and cultural construction, it has been insufficiently alive to the lingering power of specifically racialized forms of power and subordination. Each outlook compensates for the obvious weaknesses in the other camp, but so far there has been little open and explicit debate between them. Their conflict, initially formulated in debates over black aesthetics and cultural duction,49 is valuable as a preliminary guide to some of the dilemmas fuced by cultural and intellectual historians of the modern, Western, African dias- pora. The problems it raises become acute, particularly for those who seek to comprehend cultural developments and political resistances which have had scant regard for either modern borders or premodern frontiers. At its worst, the lazy, casual invocation ofcultural insiderism which frequently char- acterizes the ontological essentialist view is nothing more than a symptom The Black Atlantic 69 of the growing cleavages within the black communities. There, uneasy spokespeople of the black elite - some of them professional cultural com- mentators, artists, writers, painters, and filmmakers as well as political leaders - have fabricated a volkish outlook as an expression of their OWI1 tory position. This neonationalism seems out of tunc with the spirit of the novel Africentric garb in which it appears before us today. It incorporates commentary on the special needs and desires oftlle relatively privileged castes within black communities, but its most consistent trademark is the ent mystification of that group's increasingly problematic relationships with the black poor, who, after all, supply the elite with a dubious entitlement to speak on behalfof the phantom constituency of black people in general. The idea of blacks as a national or protonational group with its own hermetically enclosed culture plays a key role in this mystification, and, though seldom overtly named, the misplaced idea of a national interest gets invoked as a means to silence dissent and censor political debate when tlle incoherences and inconsistencies of Africalogical discourse arc put on display. These problems take 011 a specific aspect in Britain, which currently lacks anything that can be credibly called a black bourgeoisie. However, they are not confined to this coumry and they cannot be overlooked. The idea of nationality and the assumptions of cultural absolutism come together in other ways.50 It should be emphasised that, where the archeology of black critical knowledges enters the academy, it currently involves the construction of canons which seems to be procceding on an exclusively natiollal basis - African American, Anglophone Caribbean, and so on. This is not an oblique plea for thc legitimacy of an equally distinctive black English or British cul- tural inventory. Ifit seems indelicate to ask who the formation ofsuch canons might serve, then the related question ofwhere the impulse to formalize and codif).' e1emcnts ofour cultural heritagc in this particular pattern comes from may be a better onc to pursue. Is this impulse towards culrural protection- ism the most cruel trick which the West can play upon its dissident affiliates? The sameproblcm ofthe status enjoyed by national boundaries in the writing ofcuIrural history is evident in recent debates over hip hop culture, the erful expressive medium of America's urban black poor which has created a global youth movement of considerable significance. The musical compo- nents of hip hop are a hybrid form nurmred by the social relations of the South Bronx where Jamaican sound-system culture was transplanted during the 19705 and put down new roots. In conjunction with specific techno- logical innovations, this routed and rerooted Caribbean culture set in train a process that was to transform black America's sense of itself and a large portion of the popular music industry as well. Here we have to ask how a form which flaunts and glories in its own malleability as well as its tional character becomes interpreted as an expression of some authentic 70 Paul Gilroy African-American essence? How can rap be discussed as if it sprang intact from the entrails of the blucs?Sl Another way of approaching this would be to ask what is it about black America's writing elite which means that they need to claim this diasporic cultural form in such an assertively nationalist way?52 An additional, and possibly more profound, area of political difficulty comes into view when the voguish language of absolute cultural difference associated with the ontological essentialist stand oint provides an embar- rassing link between t e practIce 0 ac w10 comprehend racial politics through it and the activities of their foresworn opponents - the etlmic abso- lutists of the racist right - who approach the complex dynamics of race, nationality, and ethnicity through a similar set of pseudo-precise, culturalist equations. This unlikely convergence is part ofthe history ofhip hop because black music is so often the principal symbol of racial authenticity. Analyzing it leads rapidly and directly back to the status of nationality and national cul- tures in a postmodern world where are being eclipsed by a new economy of power that accords national citizenship and national boundaries a new significance. In seeking to account for the controversy over hip hop's origins we also have to explore how the absolutist and exclusivist approach to the relationship between "race," ethnicity, and culture places those who claim to be able to resolve the relationship between the supposedly incom- mensurable discourses characteristic of different racial groups, in command of the cultural resources of their own group as a whole. Intellectuals can claim this vanguard position by virtue of an ability to translate from one culture to another, mediating decisive oppositions along the way. It matters little whether the black communities involved arc conceived as entire and self-sustaining nations or as protonational collectivities. No less than their predecessor Martin Delany, today's black intellectuals have persistently succumbed to the lure of those romantic conceptions of "race," "people," and "nation" which place themselves, rather than the people they supposedly represent, in charge ofthe strategies for nation build- ing, state formation, and racial uplift. This point underscores the fact that the status of nationality and the precise weight we should attach to the spicuous differences of language, culture, and identity which divide the blacks of the diaspora from one another, let alone from Africans, are un- resolved within the political culture that promises to bring the disparate peoples of the black Atlantic world together one day. Furthermore, the dependence of those black intellectuals who have tried to deal with these matters on t11eoretical reflections derived from the canon of occidental modernity - from Herder to Von Trietschke and beyond - is surely salient. W. E. B. Du Bois's work will be explored below as a site of this affiliation. The case of his 1888 Fisk graduation address on Bismarck provides a pre- The Black Atlantic 71 liminary example. Reflecting on it some years later in Dusk ofDanm he wrote: "Bismarck was my hero. He made a nation out ofa mass of bickering peoples. He had dominated the whole development \vith his strength until he crowned an emperor at Versailles. This foreshadowed in my mind the kind of thing that American Negroes must do, marching forward with strength and determination under trained leadcrship."53 This model of national devel- opment has a special appeal to the bickering peoples of the black Atlantic diaspora. It is an integral component of their responses to modern racism and directly inspired their efforts to construct on Ati'ican soil and clst.'\vhere. The idea of nationality occupies a central, if shifting place in the work of Alexander Crummell, Edward Blvden, Martin Delany, and Frederick Douglass. This important group men, whose lives and political sensibilities can ironically be defined through the persist- ent crisscrossing of national boundaries, often seems to share the decidedly Hegelian belief that the combination of Christianity and a nation-state resents the overcoming of all antinomies. The themes of nationality, exile, and cultural affiliation accentuate the inescapable fragmentatIon and dlfterenbatlon of the black subject. This frag- mentation has recently been compounded furtller by the questIons ofgender, sexuaIity, and male domination which have been made unaVOidable by the struggles of black womc:p. and the VOiCes of black gay men Cal-Inot attempt to resolve these tensions here, but the dimension of social and political differentiation to which they refer provides a tiame for what follows. As indices of differentiation they arc especially important because the intracommunal antagonisms which appear between the local and diate levels of our struggles and their hemispheric and global dynamics can only grow. Black voices from within the overdeveloped countries may be able to go on resonating in harmony with those produced from inside Africa or they may, with varying degrees of reluctance, turn away from the global project of black advancement once the symbolic and political, if not the material and economic, liberation of Southern Africa is completed. [... ] The history and significance of these musics arc consistently over- looked by black writers for two reasons: because they exceed the frameworks of national or ethnocentric analysis with which we have been too easily isfied, and because talking seriously aboUt: the politics and aesthetics of black vernacular cultures demands an embarrassing confrontation with substantive intraracial differences tllat make the easv essentialism from which most criti- cal judgments arc constructed simply t;ntenable. A<; these internal divisions have grown, the price of that embarrassment has been an aching silence. To break that silence, I want to argue that black musical expression has played a role in reproducing what Zygmunt Bauman has called ajiisrinetil't' counterculture of modernity.54 I will use a brief consideration of black 72 Paul Gilroy musical development to move beyond an understanding ofcultural processes which, as I have already suggested, is currently torn between seeing them either as the expression of an essential, unchanging, sovereign racial self or as the effluent from a constituted subjectivity that emerges contingently from the endless play ofracial signification. This is usually conceived solely in terms of the inappropriate model which textttalitv provides. The vitality and com- plexity of this musical culture offers a to get 'heyond the related positions between essentialists and pseudo-pluralists on the one hand and between totalizing conceptions of tradition, modernity, and postmodernity on the other. It also provides a model of performance which can supplement and partially displace concern with textuality. Black music's obstinate and consistent commitment to tlle idea of a better future is a puzzle to which the enforced separation of slaves from literacy and their compensatory refinement of musical art supplies less than half an answer. The power of music in developing black struggles by communi- cating information, organizing consciousness, and testing out or deploying the forms of subjectivity which are required by political agency, whether individual or collective, defensive or transformational, demands attention to both the formal attributes of this expressive culture and its distinctive moral basis. The formal qualities of tllis music are becoming bettcr known,55 and I want to concentrate instead on the moral aspects and in particular on the disjunction between the ethical value of the music and its status as an ethnic sign. In the simplest possible terms, by posing the world as it is against the world as tlle racially subordinated would like it to be, this musical culture supplies a great deal of the courage required to go on living in the present. It is both produced by and expressive of that "transvaluation of all values" precipitated by the history of racial terror in the new world. It contains a theodicy but moves beyond it, because the profane dimensions of that racial terror made theodicy impossible. 56 I have considered its distinctive critique of capitalist social relations elsewhere. 57 Here, because I want to show that its critical edge includes but also surpasses anti-capitalism, it is necessary to draw out some of the inner philosophical dynamics of this counterculture and to explore the connection between its normative character and its utopian aspirations. These are interrelated and even inseparable from each other and from the critique of racial capitalism 58 tllat these expressive tmes construct but also surpass. Comprehending them necessitates an analy- sis of the lyrical content and the forms of musical expression as well as the often hidden social relations in which these deeply encoded oppositional practices are created and consumed. The issue of normative content focuses attention on what might be called the politics of fulfillment: 59 the notion that a future society will be able to realize the social and political promise The Black Atlantic 73 that present society has left unaccomplished. Reflecting the toundational semantic position of the Bible, this is a discursive mode of communication. Though by no means literal, it can be grasped through what is said, shouted, screamed, or sung. The politics of fulfillment practiced by the descendants of slaves demands, as Delany did, that bourgeois civil society live up to the promises ofits own rhetoric. It creates a medium in which demands for goals like justice and rational organization of the productive processes can be expressed. It is immanent within modernity and is no less a valuable element of modernity's counter-discourse for being consistently ignored. The issue ofhow utopias are conceived is more complex, not least because they strive continually to move beyond the grasp of the merely linguistic, textual, and discursive. The invocation of utopia references what, tollowing Seyla Benhabib's suggestive lead, I propose to call the politics of transfigu- ration. This emphasizes the emergence of qualitatively new desires, social relations, and modes of association within the racial community of tation and resistance and between that group and its erstwhile oppressors. It points specifically to the formation of a community of needs and solidar- ity which is magically made audible in the music itself and palpable in the social relations of its cultural utility and reproduction. Created under the very nose of tlle overseers, the utopian desires which fuel the complemen- tary politics of transfiguration must be invoked by other, more deliberately opaque means. This politics exists on a lower frequency where it is played, danced, and acted) as well as sung and sung about, because words) even words stretched by melisma and supplemented or mutated by the screams which stili index the conspicuous power of the slave sublime, will never be enough to communicate its unsayable claims to truth. The wilfully damaged signs which betray the resolutely utopian politics of transfiguration therefore partially transcend modernity, constructing both an imaginary anti-modern past and a postmodern This is not a counter-discourse but a counterculture that defiantly reconstructs its own critical, intellectual, and moral genealogy in a partially hidden public sphere of its own. The politics oftransfiguration therefore reveals the hidden internal fissures in the concept of modernity. The bounds of politics are extended precisely because this dition of expression refuses to accept that the political is a readily separable domain. Its basic desire is to conjure up and enact the new modes of friend- ship, happiness, and solidarity tllat arc consequent on the overcoming of the racial oppression on which modernity and its antinomy of rational, \Vestern progress as excessive barbarity relied. Thus tlle vernacular arts of the dren of slaves give rise to a verdict on the role of art which is strikingly in harmony with Adorno's reflections on the dynamics of European artistic expression in the wake of Auschwitz: "Art's Utopia, the counterfactual yet 74 Paul Gilroy to-come, is draped in black. It goes on being a recollection of the possible with a critical edge against the real; it is a kind of imaginary restitution of that catastrophe, which is world history; it is a freedom which did not pass under the spell of necessity and which may well not come to pass ever at all. "60 These sibling dimensions of black sensibility, the politics of fi.tlfillment and the politics of transfiguration, are not coextensive;. There are significant tensions between them, but they are closely associated in the vernacular cul- tures of the black Atlantic diaspora. [... ] The politics of fulfillment is mostly content to play occidental rationality at its own game. It necessitates a hermeneutic orientation that can assimilate the semiotic, verbal, and textual. The politics of transfiguration strives in pursuit of the sublime, struggling to repeat the unrepeatable, to present the unpresentable. Its rather different hermeneutic focus pushes towards the mimetic, dramatic, and performative. It seems especially significant that the cultural expressions which these musics allow us to map out do not seek to exclude problems of inequality or to make the achievement of racial justice an exclusively abstract matter. Their grounded ethics otTers, among other things, a continuous commen- tary on the systematic and pervasive relations of domination that supply its conditions ofexistence. Their grounded aesthetics is never separated off into an autonomous realm where familiar political rules cannot be applied and where, as Salman Rushdic memorably puts it, "the little room ofliterature"61 can continue to enjoy its special privileges as a heroic resource for the well- heeled adversaries of liberal capitalism. I am roposing, then, that we reread and rethink this ex ressive counter- culture not sim I r as a successl 1 erary tro es and cures but as a phi a- sap lIcal discourse whic re uses e rna ern occidental se arallon 0 an aesthetics cll1wre and po mcs. 'le traditional teaching of ethics ana politics - practical philosophy - came to an end some time ago, even if its death agonies were prolonged. This tradition had maintained the idea that a good life for the individual and the problem of the best social and political order tor the collectivity could be discerned by rational means. Though it is seldom acknowledged even now, this tradition lost its exclusive claim to rationality partly through the way that slavery became internal to Western civilization and through the obvious complicity which both plantation slavery and colonial regimes revealed between rationality and the practice of racial terror. Not perceiving its residual condition, blacks in the West eavesdropped on and then took over a fundamental question from the intellectual obses- sions of their enlightened rulers. Their progress from the status of slaves to the status of citizens led them to inquire into what the best possible forms of social and political existence might be. The memory of slavery, actively served as a living intellectual resource in their expressive political culture, helped them to generate a new set of answers to this inquiry. They had to The Black Atlantic 75 fight - often through their spirituality - to hold on to tlle unity of ethics and politics sundered from each other by modernity's insistence that the true, the good, and the beautiful had distinct origins and belong to different domains of knowledge. First slavery itself and then their memory of it induced many of them to query the foundational moves of modern philosophy and social thought, whether they came from the natural rights theorists who sought to distinguish between the spheres of morality and legality, the idealists who wanted to emancipate politics from morals so that it could become a sphere of strategic action, or tlle political economists of tlle bourgeoisie \....ho first formulated tlle separation of economic activity from both ethics and politics. The brutal excesses of the slave plantation supplied a set of moral and polit- ical responses to each of these attempts. [... JThis subculture often appears to be the intuitive expression of some racial essence but is in fuct an elemen- tary historical acquisition produced from the viscera of an alternative body of cultural and political expression that considers the world critically from the point ofview ofits emancipatory transformation. In the fuhlre it will become a place which is capable ofsatisf}'ing tlle (redefined) needs of human beings that will emerge once the violence - epistemic and concrete - of racial typol- ogy is at an end. Reason is thus reunited with the happiness and freedom of individuals and the reign of justice within the collectivity. I have already implied that tllere is a degree of convergence here with other projects towards a critical theory of society, particularly Marxism. However, where lived crisis and systemic crisis come together, Marxism allo- cates priority to the latter while the memory of slavery insists on the prior- ity of the former. Their convergence is also undercut by the simple f.1ct that in the critical thought ofblacks in the West, social self-creation through labor is not the center-piece of emancipatory hopes. For the descendants ofslaves, work signifies only servitude, misery, and subordination. Artistic expression, expanded beyond recognition from the grudging gifts offered by the masters as a token substitute for freedom from bondage, therefore becomes the means towards both individual and communal liberation. Poiesis and poetics begin to coexist in novel forms - autobiographical writing, special and uniquely creative ways of manipulating spoken language, and, above all, the music. All three have overflowed from the containers that the modern nation-state provides for them. Notes Werner Sailors, Beyond Etlmicity (New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986). [...J 25 26 27 28 22 J 76 Paul Gilroy 2J The concept of racialization is developed by Frantz Fanon in his essay "On National Culture" in VJe Wretched of the Earth (Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1967), pp. 170-1. Sec also Robert Miles, Racism (New York and London: Routledge, 1989), pp. 73-7. 3 Mary Louise Pratt, Impel'ial Eyes (London and New York: Routledge, 1992). 4 Nancy Stepan, 171 Idea of Race in Science: Great BritailJ, 1800-1960 (Bas- ingstoke: Macmillan, 1982); Michael Banton, R/uial The01'its (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987). 5 George Masse, Nationalism and Sexuality: Middle-Class Morality and Sexual Norms in Modern Em'ope (Madison and London: University of Wisconsin Press, 1985). Reinhold Grimm and Jost Hermand, cds., B1f1cks and Germall Culture (Madison and London: Univcrsity of Wisconsin Press, 1986). 6 Sander Gilman, On Blackness Without Blacks {Boston, 1'v1A: G. K. Hall, 1982). 7 See Henry Louis Gates, Jr., '"'The History and Theory of Afro-American Literary Criticism, 1773-1831: The Arts, Acsthetic Thcory and the Nature of the African" (doctoral thesis, Clare College, Cambridge University, 1978); Da\'id Brion Davis, 17)e Problem of Slapery ill Wcstcm Culture (Ithaca, NY: Cornell Univcrsity Press, 1970) and The Problem of Slm'ery ill tbe Age of Rel'O- lutioll (Ithaca, NY: Cornell Univcrsity Press, 1975); and Eva Bcatrice Dykes, 11)t Ne,lIro in English Romfllltic V)OItgbt; or A Study ofS:mtpatbyfor tbe Oppressed (Washington, DC: A'isociated Publishers, 1942). 8 Leon Poliakov, 17) Alyall Myth (London: Sussex University Press, 1974), ch. 8, and R..cism from the Enlightenment to the Age of Imperialism," in Robcrt Ross, cd., Racism and Colonialism: Essa.l's 011 Ideology and Social Structure (The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1982); Richard Popkin, "The Philosophical Basis of Eighteenth Century Racism," in Studies in Eighteenth Cmtury Culture, voJ. 3: Racism in the Eighteenth Cmt1Jry (Cleveland and London: Case Western Reserve Uni\'crsity Prcss, 1973); Harry Bracken, "Philosophy and Racism," Pbi/osophia 8, nos. 2-3, NO\'ember 1978. In some respects this pioneering work fore- shadows the debates about Hcidegger's fascism. 9 Hugh Honour's contribution to the DeMenil Foundation Project, 11Je R.. eprest1ltnti01J of tbe Black in Western Art (London and Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1989), is a welcome exception to this amnesia. 10 W. Pietz, The Problem of the Fetish, I," Res 9 (spring 1985). 11 Robin Blackburn, The Overtbl'OIv ofColO1lial SlflverJ, 1776--]848 (London and New York: Verso, 1988). 12 Winthrop D. Jordan, White opel' Black (New York: W. W. Norron, 1977). 13 Edmund Burke, A Philosophical E n q t ~ i r y into the aright of am' Ideas of the Sublime fwd the Beautiful, ed. James T. Boulton (Oxford: Blachvcll, 1987). 14 Catherine Hall, White, Male and Middle Clflss (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1992). 15 Jenny Sharpe, The Unspeakable Limits of Rape: Colonial Violence and Counter-Insurgency," Gmders, no. 10 (spring 1991): 25-46, and "Figures of Colonial Resistance," Modern Fictiol1 Stttdies35, no. 1 (spring 1989). 16 Peter Linebaugh, "All the Atlamic Mountains Shook," Labot/rllL Trm'aill(fJr 10 (autumn 1982): 87-12l. 17 Peter Fryer, Staying Power (London: Pluto Press, 1980), p. 219. The Black Atlantic 77 18 The Horrors of Slapery flud Other Writi1Jgs by Robert Wcddtrbul"1l, cd. lain McCalman (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1992). 19 lain McCalman, "Anti-Slavery and Ultra R.adicalism in Early Nineteenth- Century England: The Case of Robert Wedderburn," Slm'ery mId Abolition 7 (1986). 20 Pryer, Staying POlVer, p. 216. Public Records Oflice, London: PRO Ho 44/5/202, PRO Ho 42/199. 21 Their article "The Many Headed Hydra," /otmurl of Historical Sociololl)' 3, no. 3 (September 1990): 225-53, gives a foretaste of these arguments. John Adams quoted by Linebaugh in Atlantic Mountains," p. 112. Alfred N. Hunt, Haiti's Inj/ut1JCe 011 Allttbellt/1u A1Ju.,-ica (Baton Rougc and London: Louisiana State University Press, 1988), p. 119. 24 Douglass's own account of this is best set out in Frederick Douglass, Life and Times ofFrtdel'ick Douglass (New York: Macmillan, 1962), p. 199. Sec also Philip M. Hammmer, Great Britain, the United States and the Negro Seamcn's Acts" and "British Consuls and the Negro Seamen's Acts, 1850-1860," /0111'- nal of Southem History 1 (1935): 3-28, 138-68. Introduced alter Denmark Vescy's rebcllion, thesc interesting pieces oflegislation required frec black sailors to be jailed while their ships were in dock as .1 way of minimizing the political contagion their presence in the ports was bound to transmit. Linebaugh, "Atlantic Mountains," p. 119. Paul Gilroy, "Art of Darkness, Black Art and the Problem of Belonging to England," l1)ird Text 10 (1990). A very different interpretation of Turner's painting is given in Albert Boime's 17J( Art of b:clusiol1: ]{epresmting Blacks ill tbe Ni'leteenth CenturJ (London: Thames and Hudson, 1990). Patrick Wright, On Liping ill ml Old Cotmtr,Y (London: Verso, 1985). Bernard Semmel, ]mnaicmt Blood alld tbe Victoriml ComciellCe (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1976). Sec also Gillian Workman, "Thomas Carlyle and the Governor Eyre Controversy," Victorian Studies 18, no. 1 (1974): 77-102. 29 Vol. I, sec. 5, ch. 3, sec. 39. W. E. B. Du Bois reprintcd this commentary while he was editor of V)e Crisis; sec vol. 15 (1918): 239. 30 Eric Hobsbawm, "The Historians' Group of the Communist Party," in M. Cornforth, ed., Essays ilt HmJour of A. L. Morton (Atlantic Highlands, NT: Humanities Press, 1979). 31 Linebaugh, "Atlantic Mountains." This is also the strategy pursued by Marcus Rediker in his brilliant book Betll'cm tbe DCl,il mId the Deep B1ttt' St'fl (Cam- bridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987). 32 "A space exists when one takes into consideration vcctors of direction, velocities, and time variables. Thus space is composed ofintersections of mobilc clements. It is in a sense articulated by the ensemble of movements deployed within it." Michel de Certeau, 11J& Practice of E}'t:17day Life (Berkeley and London: University of California Prcss, 1984), p. 117. 33 See Michael Cohn and Michael K. Platzer, Black Men of the Sea (New York: I)63d, Mead, 1978). I have been heavily reliant on George Francis Dow's \,Ainthology Slave Sbips and Slaviltg, publication no. 15 of the Marine Research Society (1927; rpt. Cambridge, MD: Cornell Maritime Press, J968 j, which 78 Paul Gilroy includes extracts from valuable eighteenth and nineteenth-century material. On England, I have found the anonymously published study Liverpool and Slaver." (Liverpool: A Bowker and Sons, 1884) to be very valuable. Memoirs produced by black sea captains also point to a number of new intercultural and transcul- tural research problems. Captain Harry Dean's 11le Pedro GOritlO: TIle Advm- tUrcS ofa Negro Sea Captaitl ill Africa and O1J the Sevm Seas in His attempts to Fotmd an Ethiopian Empire (Boston and New York: lIoughton Mifflin, 1929) contains interesting material on the practical politics of pan-Africanism that go unrecorded elsewhere. Captain Hugh Mulzac's autobiography, A Stat to Steer B.'i' (New York: International Publishers, 1963), includes valuable observations on the role of ships in the Garvey movement. Some pointers towards what a black Atlantic rereading of the history of Rastafari might involve are to be found in Robert A. Hill's important essay which accentuates complex post-slavery rclations bet\veen Jamaica and Africa: "'Dread History: Leonard P. Howell and Millenarian Visions in Early Rastafari Religions in Jamaica," Epocht: fotlmal of the History ofRe/igiotlS at UCLA 9 (1981): 30-71. 34 Stephen Greenblatt, Marvellous Possessom (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992). See also Pratt, Imperial Eyes. ... ~ James T. Clifford, "Travelling Cultures," in Cultural Studies, cd. Lawrence ~ Grossberg et al. (New York and London: Routledge, 1992), and "'Notes on Theory and Travel," Imcriptiom 5 (1989), 36 Manchestet WeekZr Advertiser, July 21, 1860; Punch, July 28, 1860; Momi'Jfl Stm', July 18, 1860; and F. A. Rollin, Life and Public Services of Martin R. Delan." (Bosron, MA: Lee and Shepard, 1868), p. 102. 37 Peter Winzen, "Treitschke's Influence on the Rise ofImperialist and Anti-British Nationalism in Germany," in P. Kennedy and A. Nicholls, cds., Nationalist atld Racialist MOl'emmts in Bn'tain and GermatJ.Y before 1914 (Basingsrokc: Macmillan, 1981). 38 Ida B. Wells quoted in Vron Ware, BeyotJd the Pale: White WometJ, Racism, and HistOl:v (London and New York: Verso, 1992), p. 177. 39 Carolyn Ashbaugh, Lucy ParsotlS: American Revolutiotmr.r(Chicago, IL: Charles I-I. Kerr, 1976}. I must thank Tommy Lott for this reference. 40 Frank Hooker, Black Revolutionary: George Padmore's Path from Cottntwnism to Pan-Africanism (London: Pall Mall Library of African Affairs, 1967). 41 William S. McFeely, F/'cderick Dottglass (New York: W. W. Norton, 1991), p. 329. 42 Michel Fabre, Black Amel'ican Writers itl Fratlce, 1840-1980 (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1991). 43 Ursula Broschke Davis, Pm'is without Regl-et (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1986), p. 102. 44 I challenge this view in chapter 5. [Editors' note: Gilroy refers to chapter 5 of The Black Atlantic.] 45 Some of the problems associated with this strategy h.we been discussed by Cornel West in "Minority Discourse and the Pitfalls ofCanon Formation," Yale Jotlmal of Criticism 1, no. 1 (fall 1987): 193-201. [..J The Black Atlantic 79 46 This phrase is taken from Wright's novel 11Jt Outsider (New York: Harper and Row, 1953), p. 129. In his book ofessays, White Man Listm! (Garden City, NY: Anchor Books, 1964), he employs the phrase "dual existence" to map the same terrain. Sec chapter 5 below, [Editors) note: Gilroy refers to chapter 5 of J7Je Black Atlat/tic.] 47 Edouard Glissant, I.e Discotlrs atltil/ais (Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1981). 48 Stuart Hall, "New Ethnicities," in K. Mercer, ed., Black Film: British Cinema (London: leA Documents 7,1988), p. 28. 49 Sec Tm.8 2, no. 3 (1992), issue entitled 77JC Critical Decade. 50 Etienne Balibar and Immanuel Wallerstein, Race, Nation, Class (London and New York: Verso, 1991). 51 Nelson George, TIle Death of Rhythm atld Blues (London: Omnibus, 1988). 52 I should emphasize that it is the assimilation of these cultural forms to an unthinking notion of nationality which is the object of my critique here. Of course, certain cultural forms become articulated with sets of social and politi- cal forces over long periods of time. These forms may be played with and lived with as though they were natural emblems ofraaal and ethnic particuktrity. This may even be an essential defensive attribute of the interpretive communities involved. However, the notion of nationality cannot be borrowed as a ready- made means to make sense of the special dynamics of this process. 53 W. E. B. Du Bois, Dusk of Dawn, in Dubois Writinlls (New York: Library of America, 1986), p. 577. 54 Zygmunt Bauman, "The Left as the Counterculture of Modernity," Telos 70 (winter 1986-7): 81-93. 55 Amhony Jackson's dazzling exposition of James Jamerson's bass style is, in my view, indicative of the type of detailed critical work which needs to be done on the form and dynamics of black musical creativity. His remarks on Jamerson's usc of harmonic and rhythmic ambiguity and selective employment of dissonance were especially helpful. To say that the book from which it is taken has been geared to the needs of the performing musician rather than the cultural historian is to indict the current state ofcultural history rather than the work of Jackson and his collaboraror Dr. Licks. See "An Appreciation of the Style," in Dr. Licks, ed., Stat/ding itl the SlJadOlvs ofMotOlvn (Detroit, MI: Hal Leonard, 1989). 56 I am thinking here both of Wright's tantalizing discussion of the Dozens in the essay on the "'Literary Tradition of the Negro in the United States" in White MatI Listen! and also of Lcvinas's remarks on useless suffering in another context: "useless and unjustifiable suffering [are] exposed and displayed. without any shadow of a consoling theodicy." Sec ""Useless SufTering," in R. Bernasconi and D. Wood, cds., TIJC PrOl'ocatioll ofI..l'ins(London: Routledge, 1988). Jon Michael Spencer's thoughtful but fervently Christian discussion of what he calls the Thcodicy of the Blues is also relevant here. See TIle 17Jeology of Amen'can Populat' MIlSic, a special issue of Black Sam:d Music 3, no. 2 (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, fall 1989). I do not have space to develop my critique of Spencer here. 57 TIlere Ain't No Black in the Uniml Jack: 11JC Cultuml Politics ofRace and Nation (London: Hutchinson, 1987), ch. 5. 80 Paul Gilroy 58 Cedric Robinson, Black Marxism (London: Zed Press, 1982). 59 This concept and its pairing with the politics of transfiguration have been adapted from their deployment in Seyla Benhabib's inspiring book Critique, Norm and Utopia (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987). 60 T. W. Adorno, Aesthetic 17JC01J' (London: Routledge, 1984), p. 196. 61 Salman Rushdic, Is Nothing Sacrcd?The Herbert Read Memorial Lecture 1990 (Cambridge: Granta, 1990), p. 16. Additional Readings on Modernity, Globalism, and Diaspora Anthias, Flora. "'Beyond Unities ofldentit}' in High Modernity." ldmtities: Global Studies ilt Cultltre a1Jd POlVcr. 6.1 (1999): 121-44. Appadurai, Arjun. Modemit) at !Awe: CIIltural Dimemiom of GlobalizatiOfl. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1996. Beyer, Peter. "The City and Beyond as Dialogue: Negotiating Religious Authentic ity in Global Society." Social Compass. 45.1 (1998): 67-79. Cochran, Terry. "The Emergence of Global Contemporaneity." Diaspora. 5.1 (1996): 119-40. Cohen, Robin. Global Diasporas: An bJtl'odllctioll. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1997. Dirlik, Arif. "The Postcolonial Aura: Third World Criticism in the Age of Global Capitalism.'" Critical Inquiry 20.2 (1994): 328-56. Gilroy, Paul. "It Ain't Where You're From, It's Where You're At: The Dialectics of Diasporic Identification." 17Jil'd Text 13 (winter 1991): 3-16. --TIJe Black Atlantic: Modernity alld DOl/ble Comciomncss. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1993. Green, Charles. Globalizati01J mtd Surl'il'al ill the Black Diaspom: 17le New Urbml Challenge. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1997. Grosfoguel, R. and Hector Cordero Guzman. "International Migration in a Global Context: Recent Approaches to Migration Theory." Diaspora 7.3 (1998): 351-68. Hanchard, Michael. "'Identity, Meaning and the African-American.'" Social 1e.xt 24 (1990): 31-42. --"Racial Consciousness and Afro-Diasporic Experiences: Amonio Gramsci Reconsidered." Socialism and Dcmocrac'y 3 (1991): 83-106. --"Afro-Modernity: Temporality, Politics and the African Diaspora." Public C"I,"" 11.1 (1999): 245-68. Harper, T. N. "'Globalism and the Pursuit of Authenticity: The Making of a Diasporic Public Sphere in Singapore." Soj01t1'1J: Journal of Social [smcs ill Southeast Asia 12.2 (1997): 261-92.