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Sto caricando le informazioni... Afropean: Notes from Black Europe (edizione 2019)di Johny Pitts (Autore)
Informazioni sull'operaAfropean: Notes from Black Europe di Johny Pitts
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Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. I purchased this book on first sight during a visit to Daunt Books in London last September, as the topic was of great interest to me. As an African American male who has traveled to western Europe 2-4 times a year for the past 13 years, visited seven countries, and intends to retire there by the end of this decade I feel very comfortable and well treated as an American tourist, but I also recognize that my experience is very different from Blacks from Africa and the Caribbean, particularly recent ones, who are often viewed very differently than I am. I have also largely failed to connect with Black Europeans, save for those in the Netherlands of Afro-Surinamese descent, who often mistake me from one of them and greet me in Dutch, because of our similar mixed racial backgrounds and appearance. I read this book in order to gain greater insight about the Black communities in Europe, and their experiences living there as native born citizens and recent immigrants. The television presenter, photographer and author Johny Pitts is an Englishman with a particularly unique background, as his father is a Brooklyn born singer in the moderately successful R&B group The Fantastics, who met Johny's Irish mother in a club in the town of Sheffield in South Yorkshire. He grew up within two cultures that he could not completely identify with, due to his mixed race, and he was subjected to racist abuse during his childhood. As he reached adulthood he became interested in the experiences of Blacks living in Europe. After years of saving money he embarked on a five month journey, in October of 2010 or 2011, I believe, to discover everyday and better known Afropeans living in major cities in Europe, to learn about their personal experiences and to determine what they all shared as members of the African diaspora living outside of their ancestral lands. According to Pitts, the term "Afropean" was a 1990s creation of a Belgian-Congolese artist, Marie Daulne, and the American musician David Byrne, and it is the name of his blog (https://www.afropean.com), which he uses as a forum for himself and others to share stories, photographs and personal accounts of what it means to be Black in Europe. 'Afropean' begins with a description of Sheffield and Pitts' experiences growing up there, and the journey begins with a Eurostar train ride from London to Paris. Pitts and the reader, who is made to feel like a travel companion and confidant of the author throughout the book, join a small group of middle class African Americans on a tour of Black Paris, which was notable for the often boorish and prejudicial attitudes of the tourists toward their poorer and less polished Black brothers and sisters. He spends most of his time in Clichy-Sous-Bois, a well known banlieue (suburb) which is in close geographic proximity to the French capital, but isolated from it due to poor transportation to central Paris, poverty and a high concentration of African immigrants, which left Pitts dispirited in comparison to his experiences in the city. A short SNCF (French Railways) train takes him to Brussels, and a visit to a much more diverse and welcoming community in the Belgian capital, and subsequent rail journeys take him to Amsterdam, Berlin, Stockholm, Marseille and the French Riviera, and Lisbon. He also makes a brief airplane journey to Moscow, whose citizens have become extremely hostile and violent towards African university students after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, and he escaped serious injury or death after he chose not to enter the car of a Muscovite who wanted to give him a "ride". Pitts describes several vibrant multicultural communities where Blacks and Whites live harmoniously, such as Château Rouge in Paris, Matongé in Brussels, and the area that houses the Young African Artist Market in Berlin. He also travels to impoverished and segregated neighborhoods, including the Bijlmer section of Amsterdam and Cova da Moura, a favela on the outskirts of Lisbon, in addition to Clichy-Sous-Bois. He also describes how the people living in the communities came to live there, their experiences in their countries, and notable Afropeans from these areas, past and present, including the soul jazz duo Les Nubians, Otto and Hermina Huiswoud, who were members of the Harlem Renaissance but emigrated to Amsterdam after World War II due to their communist activities, and British author Caryl Phillips, who he met for the first time in Brussels. He also describes the experiences and homes of famous people who lived in these areas, particularly authors James Baldwin and Claude McKay, along with the notorious Congolese dictator Joseph Mobutu. 'Afropean' was an enlightening look into the lives and struggles of ordinary and famous Black Europeans, and I enjoyed the journey I took alongside its author. I'll follow his online blog, in order to learn more about my Afropean future brothers and sisters, and copy him by making more of an effort to engage ones I encounter during my future visits to the continent. Hip-hop artist Mos Def once wrote of the depiction of black culture in the media that ‘we’re either niggas or kings, we’re either bitches or queens’, and in contemporary Europe it seemed to me that black people were either presented as über-stylized retro hipster dandies in thick-rimmed glasses and a bit of kente cloth, or dangerous hooded ghetto-yoot. One of the most beautiful things about this wildly divided and sprawling book is how its views on what being a black person in Europe is just as wild and sprawling, over time, countries, people, and other man-made dividers. From his home of Sheffield, England, the author makes his way through France, Belgium, Sweden, Holland, and other countries, while experiencing life, experiencing racism, friendships, struggles, and hope. It was amazing how many black men I met in Europe, fresh from Africa, who had constructed outward identities that were pastiches of black diaspora cultural icons produced in and adopted by the West … variants of Bob Marley, 2Pac, Drake, and so on. It was about survival: they knew full well that some forms of blackness are more acceptable than others, that there is a hierarchy imposed by the white gaze. There is a lot to say about Pitts's experiences, but he actually says it best himself: In the twenty-first century cracks in the façade of Dutch innocence are beginning to show, not only in the form of Geert Wilders’s hateful rhetoric but perhaps even more potently with the controversy over an old Dutch fascination with a character called Zwarte Piet – or Black Pete – an underling of Santa Claus dreamed up by a Dutch teacher and poet in a book called Sint Nikolaas en zijn Knecht (Saint Nicholas and His Servant), which was published in the late nineteenth century. Sweden, for example, looks very accepting, multi-cultural, and super-open to begin with, once you scratch its surface and speak with some of the people who aren't white. Another uniquely Swedish term is mys, a pop philosophy which has become wildly popular in lifestyle consumerism, like the East Asian concepts of feng shui and wabi-sabi, through its Danish incarnation hygge (the cultivation of cosiness), which at first suggested warmth and conviviality when I’d read about it in books on interior design. Certainly, I felt there was a degree of snugness in Stockholm, but on this trip I began to see these uniquely Scandinavian ideas as private pleasures that had a way of alienating anyone outside an inner circle of friends. What did it take, exactly, to become part of that folkhemmet family of citizens? As I looked to link my experience in Stockholm with a wider black experience in Europe, Stockholm’s tapestry of tolerance began quietly fraying. En route to Rinkeby I’d had an odd encounter. A woman called Caroline, who I suspect was a little drunk from the night before and who had a massive bull mastiff with her, started chatting me up. In eight years of travelling to Stockholm it was my first meeting with any white Swede who I knew could be described as ‘working class’ – in certain parts of the city it can feel as though the only demographic is the middle class. She was particularly enamoured with my black Britishness and her sentences were littered with profanities, which is often a sign that someone has learned British English as a second language through local immersion. Her accent had a more Swedish bounce than most other Swedes I met, who, growing up watching Hollywood movies, had acquired a more American accent when they spoke English, but Caroline’s also had a very slight hint of Jamaican. This is a very interesting and enthralling book; it is to me, a white and middle-aged man who lives in Stockholm. If there's anything I'd change in regard to this book, it would be to edit it more tightly, to make it breathe better. The stories are prolific and—sadly—nearly timeless. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
'Afropean' is an on-the-ground documentary of areas where Europeans of African descent are juggling their multiple allegiances and forging new identities. Here is an alternative map of the continent, taking the reader to places like Cova Da Moura, the Cape Verdean shantytown on the outskirts of Lisbon with its own underground economy, and Rinkeby, the area of Stockholm that is eighty per cent Muslim. Johny Pitts visits the former Patrice Lumumba University in Moscow, where West African students are still making the most of Cold War ties with the USSR, and Clichy Sous Bois in Paris, which gave birth to the 2005 riots, all the while presenting Afropeans as lead actors in their own story. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)305.89604Social sciences Social Sciences; Sociology and anthropology Groups of people Ethnic and national groups ; racism, multiculturalism Other Groups African Origin EuropeClassificazione LCVotoMedia:
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I read the German translation. It reads smoothly, though I did notice one idiom translated word for word, which did not make much sense.
He talks a lot about the pictures he is taking, but the poorly printed black and white images are not easy to figure out. I hope this is just the German edition. ( )