Riding with Death: Vodou Art and Urban Ecology in the Streets of Port-au-Prince

Author:   Jana Braziel
Publisher:   University Press of Mississippi
ISBN:  

9781496812742


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   30 June 2017
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Riding with Death: Vodou Art and Urban Ecology in the Streets of Port-au-Prince


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Overview

On the southern end of the Grand Rue, a major thoroughfare that runs through the center of Port-au-Prince, waits the Haitian capital’s automobile repair district. This veritable junkyard of steel and rubber, recycled parts, old tires, and scrap metal might seem an unlikely foundry for art. Yet, on the street’s opposite end thrives the Grand Rue Galerie, a working studio of assembled art and sculptures wrought from the refuse. Established by artists André Eugène and Celeur in the late 1990s, the Grand Rue’s urban environmental aesthetics—defined by motifs of machinic urbanism, Vodou bricolage, the postprimitivist altermodern, and performative politics—radically challenge ideas about consumption, waste, and environmental hazards, as well as consider innovative solutions to these problems in the midst of poverty, insufficient social welfare, lack of access to arts, education, and basic needs. In Riding with Death, Jana Braziel explores the urban environmental aesthetics of the Grand Rue Sculptors and the beautifully constructed sculptures they have designed from salvaged automobile parts, rubber tires, carved wood, and other recycled materials.Through first-person accounts and fieldwork, Braziel constructs an urban ecological framework for understanding these sculptures amid environmental degradation and grinding poverty. Influenced by urban geographers, art historians, and political theorists, the book regards the underdeveloped cities of the Global South as alternate spaces for challenging the profit-driven machinations of global capitalism. Above all, Braziel presents Haitian artists who live on the most challenged Caribbean island, yet who thrive as creators reinventing refuse as art and resisting the abjection of their circumstances.

Full Product Details

Author:   Jana Braziel
Publisher:   University Press of Mississippi
Imprint:   University Press of Mississippi
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.80cm
Weight:   0.520kg
ISBN:  

9781496812742


ISBN 10:   1496812743
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   30 June 2017
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

The Swiss anthropologist Alfred Metraux, who saw Vodou as a modern, urban religion, may have been among the first to pay serious attention to what he called the 'veritable junk shop' that found its way onto the altar in Vodou temples. Jana Evans Braziel's Riding with Death takes us from the forties to the present in her original exploration of the hallucinatory assemblages that the artists of the Grand Rue have drawn from the recycled urban trash of Port-au-Prince. Objects charged with magical and supernatural meaning but improvised from the twisted, rusting materials abandoned by global capitalism are analyzed in terms of what she calls Vodou bricolage. Riding with Death is outstanding in its use of theories of imaginative dwelling in urban space to position Haiti in the art historical context of the Americas. --J. Michael Dash, professor of French, New York University


The Swiss anthropologist Alfred Metraux, who saw Vodou as a modern, urban religion, may have been among the first to pay serious attention to what he called the 'veritable junk shop' that found its way onto the altar in Vodou temples. Jana Evans Braziel's Riding with Death takes us from the forties to the present in her original exploration of the hallucinatory assemblages that the artists of the Grand Rue have drawn from the recycled urban trash of Port-au-Prince. Objects charged with magical and supernatural meaning but improvised from the twisted, rusting materials abandoned by global capitalism are analyzed in terms of what she calls Vodou bricolage. Riding with Death is outstanding in its use of theories of imaginative dwelling in urban space to position Haiti in the art historical context of the Americas. --J. Michael Dash, professor of French, New York University


�The Swiss anthropologist Alfred M�traux, who saw Vodou as a modern, urban religion, may have been among the first to pay serious attention to what he called the �veritable junk shop� that found its way onto the altar in Vodou temples. Jana Evans Braziel�s Riding with Death takes us from the forties to the present in her original exploration of the hallucinatory assemblages that the artists of the Grand Rue have drawn from the recycled urban trash of Port-au-Prince. Objects charged with magical and supernatural meaning but improvised from the twisted, rusting materials abandoned by global capitalism are analyzed in terms of what she calls Vodou bricolage. Riding with Death is outstanding in its use of theories of imaginative dwelling in urban space to position Haiti in the art historical context of the Americas.��J. Michael Dash, professor of French, New York University The Swiss anthropologist Alfred Metraux, who saw Vodou as a modern, urban religion, may have been among the first to pay serious attention to what he called the 'veritable junk shop' that found its way onto the altar in Vodou temples. Jana Evans Braziel's Riding with Death takes us from the forties to the present in her original exploration of the hallucinatory assemblages that the artists of the Grand Rue have drawn from the recycled urban trash of Port-au-Prince. Objects charged with magical and supernatural meaning but improvised from the twisted, rusting materials abandoned by global capitalism are analyzed in terms of what she calls Vodou bricolage. Riding with Death is outstanding in its use of theories of imaginative dwelling in urban space to position Haiti in the art historical context of the Americas. --J. Michael Dash, professor of French, New York University


The Swiss anthropologist Alfred M�traux, who saw Vodou as a modern, urban religion, may have been among the first to pay serious attention to what he called the 'veritable junk shop' that found its way onto the altar in Vodou temples. Jana Evans Braziel's Riding with Death takes us from the forties to the present in her original exploration of the hallucinatory assemblages that the artists of the Grand Rue have drawn from the recycled urban trash of Port-au-Prince. Objects charged with magical and supernatural meaning but improvised from the twisted, rusting materials abandoned by global capitalism are analyzed in terms of what she calls Vodou bricolage. Riding with Death is outstanding in its use of theories of imaginative dwelling in urban space to position Haiti in the art historical context of the Americas. --J. Michael Dash, professor of French, New York University The Swiss anthropologist Alfred M'traux, who saw Vodou as a modern, urban religion, may have been among the first to pay serious attention to what he called the 'veritable junk shop' that found its way onto the altar in Vodou temples. Jana Evans Braziel's Riding with Death takes us from the forties to the present in her original exploration of the hallucinatory assemblages that the artists of the Grand Rue have drawn from the recycled urban trash of Port-au-Prince. Objects charged with magical and supernatural meaning but improvised from the twisted, rusting materials abandoned by global capitalism are analyzed in terms of what she calls Vodou bricolage. Riding with Death is outstanding in its use of theories of imaginative dwelling in urban space to position Haiti in the art historical context of the Americas. --J. Michael Dash, professor of French, New York University �The Swiss anthropologist Alfred M�traux, who saw Vodou as a modern, urban religion, may have been among the first to pay serious attention to what he called the �veritable junk shop� that found its way onto the altar in Vodou temples. Jana Evans Braziel�s Riding with Death takes us from the forties to the present in her original exploration of the hallucinatory assemblages that the artists of the Grand Rue have drawn from the recycled urban trash of Port-au-Prince. Objects charged with magical and supernatural meaning but improvised from the twisted, rusting materials abandoned by global capitalism are analyzed in terms of what she calls Vodou bricolage. Riding with Death is outstanding in its use of theories of imaginative dwelling in urban space to position Haiti in the art historical context of the Americas.� �J. Michael Dash, professor of French, New York University The Swiss anthropologist Alfred Metraux, who saw Vodou as a modern, urban religion, may have been among the first to pay serious attention to what he called the 'veritable junk shop' that found its way onto the altar in Vodou temples. Jana Evans Braziel's Riding with Death takes us from the forties to the present in her original exploration of the hallucinatory assemblages that the artists of the Grand Rue have drawn from the recycled urban trash of Port-au-Prince. Objects charged with magical and supernatural meaning but improvised from the twisted, rusting materials abandoned by global capitalism are analyzed in terms of what she calls Vodou bricolage. Riding with Death is outstanding in its use of theories of imaginative dwelling in urban space to position Haiti in the art historical context of the Americas. --J. Michael Dash, professor of French, New York University


Author Information

Jana Braziel, Cincinnati, Ohio, is Western College Endowed Professor and chair of global and intercultural studies at Miami University. She has coedited five volumes and is author of Duvalier’s Ghosts: Race, Diaspora, and U.S. Imperialism in Haitian Literatures; Caribbean Genesis: Jamaica Kincaid and the Writing of New Worlds; Artists, Performers, and Black Masculinity in the Haitian Diaspora; and Diaspora: An Introduction.

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