Blackness and Lines of Beauty in the Eighteenth-century Anglophone Atlantic World
Blackness and Lines of Beauty in the Eighteenth-century Anglophone Atlantic World
This essay recalibrates the visual signifier of blackness in eighteenth-century art to the period's adjoining theories and visual aesthetics of lines. The uneven archive of eighteenth-century Anglophone materials - comprised of visual representations of black subjects and written works by black subjects - invites readers of the present to move between, at least, visual and textual modes of interpretation. Building from the scholarship of David Dabydeen and the work of eighteenth-century Londoner, grocer, critic and free black artist Ignatius Sancho, this essay argues that the interplay of visual and textual lines renews readings of eighteenth-century representations of blackness. On the one hand, readings around this interplay open up a recognition of the interrelatedness of literary production, like the rise of the English novel, and the Caribbean plantation system; on the other, these readings gesture at the submerged relationships between eighteenth-century black subjects in the Anglophone Atlantic world.
CITATION: Huang, Kristina. Blackness and Lines of Beauty in the Eighteenth-century Anglophone Atlantic World . Oxon : Taylor & Francis Group , 2019. African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal, Volume 12, Number 3, 2019, PP. 271-286 - Available at: https://library.au.int/blackness-and-lines-beauty-eighteenth-century-anglophone-atlantic-world