Gwendolyn Bennett and Juanita Harrison: Writing the Black Radical Tradition

O. Walsh, Kate Dossett
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Narratives of radicalism privilege the intellectual thought of men whose ideas are preserved through publication and archives. Black women thinkers are often presumed to be missing from the archive. When they are present, their work is harder to find – often scattered across institutions whose archival practices fail to recognise Black female agency. Black feminist scholars such as Darlene Clark Hine and Saidiya Hartman have created new frameworks to map the unknowable, to reclaim and make visible that which has been withheld, without re-enacting the violence of the archive. This essay considers these issues by exploring the presence of Black women in archives of radicalism in the early twentieth century. It focuses on the public life and writings of Juanita Harrison, whose travelogue was a bestseller in 1936, and the archive of Gwendolyn Bennett, artist and writer who was at the centre of cultural networks in and beyond the Harlem Renaissance. Considering the two together, this article explores how both women attempted to control what was included and what was left out in their public writings and archives, and how this has been shaped by archives of surveillance that privilege the ‘doing’ rather than ‘thinking’ of radical Black women.
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格温多林·贝内特和胡安妮塔·哈里森:书写黑人激进传统
激进主义的叙事赋予了那些思想通过出版物和档案得以保存的人以特权。黑人女性思想家通常被认为是档案中缺失的。当她们在场时,她们的作品就更难找到了——往往分散在那些档案实践不承认黑人女性代理的机构中。黑人女权主义学者,如达琳·克拉克·海恩和赛迪亚·哈特曼,创造了新的框架来描绘不可知的事物,在不重现档案暴力的情况下,重新夺回和展示被隐瞒的东西。本文通过探索二十世纪早期激进主义档案中黑人妇女的存在来考虑这些问题。它聚焦于胡安妮塔·哈里森(Juanita Harrison)的公共生活和著作,她的游记在1936年成为畅销书,以及格温多林·贝内特(Gwendolyn Bennett)的档案,她是哈莱姆文艺复兴时期内外文化网络的中心。考虑到这两者,本文探讨了这两位女性如何试图控制她们的公共著作和档案中包含的内容和遗漏的内容,以及这是如何被监视档案所塑造的,这些档案赋予了激进黑人女性“做”而不是“想”的特权。
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