
The Red Fez
On Art and Possession in Africa
Fritz Kramer(Author)
Verso Books (Publisher)
Published on 17. August 1993
Book
Paperback/Softback
304 pages
978-1-78663-725-3 (ISBN)
Description
This remarkable and controversial book explores the ways in which colonial Europeans have been represented in African ritual art and drama. Through a profound re-examination of Western concepts of otherness and mimesis, the anthropologist and art historian Fritz Kramer shows that African images of Europeans -in sculpture, masquerades and, above all, spirit possession - are the reverse and also the counterpart of European images of the Other as savage, whether noble or ignoble. For Africans, Europeans belonged to the realm of nature, to a state of innocence.
Rejecting the modernist view of African art as abstract, Kramer insists on its mimetic qualities. These rituals are representations of some-thing experienced, although the experiences have been transformed into spirits. In ways which may echo nineteenth-century European realism, they reveal the power of the visible, of the telling, obsessive detail: a feather, a shirt, or the eponymous red fez which runs like a leitmotiv through spirit possession cults of the early colonial period. Just as one danced an ancestor or an animal, so one could dance a motor-car or an aeroplane, possessed by the spirit of the thing.
The Red Fez is certainly a book of wonders but, more importantly, it is a study of wonderment. Fritz Kramer takes his readers through a hall of mirrors, in which can be found startling likenesses of ourselves and our culture. By different paths, Kramer leads us through another world back to our own, presenting a challenge to anthropology and indeed to social science as a whole.
Rejecting the modernist view of African art as abstract, Kramer insists on its mimetic qualities. These rituals are representations of some-thing experienced, although the experiences have been transformed into spirits. In ways which may echo nineteenth-century European realism, they reveal the power of the visible, of the telling, obsessive detail: a feather, a shirt, or the eponymous red fez which runs like a leitmotiv through spirit possession cults of the early colonial period. Just as one danced an ancestor or an animal, so one could dance a motor-car or an aeroplane, possessed by the spirit of the thing.
The Red Fez is certainly a book of wonders but, more importantly, it is a study of wonderment. Fritz Kramer takes his readers through a hall of mirrors, in which can be found startling likenesses of ourselves and our culture. By different paths, Kramer leads us through another world back to our own, presenting a challenge to anthropology and indeed to social science as a whole.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Dimensions
Height: 233 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
476 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-78663-725-3 (9781786637253)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Fritz W. Kramer is Chair of Art Theory at the Hochschule kir bildondo KOnste in Hamburg. His books include Literature Among the Curia Indians, Verkehrte Welten, Zeitmarken and Bikini: Die Bombardierung der Engel.
Malcolm R. Green, the translator, is a co-founder of Atlas Press in London, for whom he has recently translated Albert Ehrenstein's Tubutsch, Oskar Panizza's The Council of Love, and Wolfgang Bauer's The Feverhead. He has also edited and translated several anthologies, including The Selected Writings of Konrad Bayer, Gunter Brus's Picture Poems and a selection of Expressionist prose, The Golden Bomb.
Malcolm R. Green, the translator, is a co-founder of Atlas Press in London, for whom he has recently translated Albert Ehrenstein's Tubutsch, Oskar Panizza's The Council of Love, and Wolfgang Bauer's The Feverhead. He has also edited and translated several anthologies, including The Selected Writings of Konrad Bayer, Gunter Brus's Picture Poems and a selection of Expressionist prose, The Golden Bomb.