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El. knyga: Masquerade: Scripturalizing Modernities through Black Flesh

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Continuing his project of critical analysis of the scriptural formation of culture, Vincent L. Wimbush has gathered in this book essays by scholars of various backgrounds and orientations that focus in different registers on the theme of masquerade as the play-element in modern culture. Masquerade functions as window onto the mimetic performances, dynamics, arrangements, psycho-logics, and politics (scripturalizing) by which the made-up becomes fixed or realities or (scripturalization). Modern-world racialization (and its attendant explosions into racialisms and racisms) as the hyper-scripturalization of difference in human flesh (registered in psycho-social relations as a type of scripture) is argued in this book to be one of the most consequential examples and reflections of masquerade and thereby one of the primary impetuses behind and determinants of the shape of the realities of modernities. The open window onto these realities is facilitated by touchstone references tonot exhaustive treatment ofa now famous eighteenth-century life story, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa, the African, Written by Himself (1789). This story told by a complexly positioned Black-fleshed self-acknowledged ex-slave/stranger is itself a mask-ing that throws light on the predominantly white Anglophone world as masking (as scriptural formation). Equiano/Vassas story as masking helps makes a compelling case for analyzing through Black flesh the ongoing shaping of the modern and the perduring mixed when not also devastating consequences.
Introduction:

Everything About Me Was Magic:

The Black-Fleshed and the Making and Management of Modernities

Vincent L. Wimbush

1 Scripturalectics and Masquerading Flesh

Shay Welch

2 Under the Sign of The African: Masquerade and Identity Formation and
Deployment in EquianoVassas Interesting Narrative/Memoir

Carolyn M. Jones Medine

3 Within the Veil and Between the Masks: Reflections on Unveilings and
Unmaskings after the Apocalypse

Jacqueline Hidalgo

4 Between the Veil and the Mirror: Josephine Baker and the Scripturalization
of Black Modernity in France

Cécile Coquet-Mokoko

5 Whose Flesh? Flesh Tone as Scripturalization in the Art and Practice of
Ballet

P. Kimberleigh Jordan

6 Relentlessly Pursu[ ing] All Who Live in Darkness: The African Read as
Bondage Through Devotional Missionary Life Writing

Rachel E. C. Beckley

7 Seeking Solace: Finding Hush Harbors for Healing Scripturalization Horrors

Velma E. Love

8 Toni Morrison and the Masquerade of Black Oral Imprint with a Meditation on
The Preparation of Soft-Boiled Eggs

Miles P. Grier

9 There Remains Only Constant Struggle: Scholarship as Telling Stories of
Radical Black Subjectivities

Rosetta Ross

10 Olaudah Equiano/Gustavus Vassa and Kossola or Cujo Lewis: History Writing
and the Masquerade

Marla Frederick
Vincent L. Wimbush is founding director of The Institute for Signifying Scriptures.