Artículos de revistas
Afro-Porteños at the end of the nineteenth century: discussing the nation
Fecha
2014-04Registro en:
Geler, Lea Natalia; Afro-Porteños at the end of the nineteenth century: discussing the nation; Taylor & Francis; African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal; 7; 2; 4-2014; 105-118
1752-8631
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Geler, Lea Natalia
Resumen
Argentina is a country that, even today, identifies itself as a modern, white, and European nation. This representation began to be projected in the last decades of the nineteenth century, framed in the state-consolidation and nation-building processes, which will be the historical context for this paper. It was also the time when a certain notion became broadly accepted: that Afro-Argentines, the descendants of formerly enslaved African people, had ‘disappeared’. By contrast, in that same period, Afro-Porteños (Porteños are citizens of Buenos Aires, capital of Argentina) had not disappeared but constituted an important community, which produced numerous newspapers. Through the analysis of Afro-Porteño newspapers, their self-representations and discourses, some of the ways they negotiated with the ideology of modernity and Europeanism (that implied whiteness) will be discussed. The agency of Afro-Porteños will be examined as we analyze how Afro-Porteño intellectuals promoted state values to their group and at the same time defended their community against discrimination.