This meditation on diasporic belonging, the limits of light and vision, and the practices people enact to become one with the earth examines watercolors done by British artist William Berryman while he lived in Jamaica between 1808 and 1816. It focuses on depictions of the provision ground, small plots of land enslaved people and their families used to grow food and, ultimately, forge a connection with the land. The author peels back the layers of Berryman’s scenes, looking beyond what has been rendered visible, countering European representations of landscape that privilege vision and light. She contemplates what we cannot see in these images: buried entities that formed a network of power known to enslaved people, engaging Katherine McKittrick’s theory of Black geographies. Through these entities, people of African descent established blood ties with the earth of Jamaica, thus—to use Sylvia Wynter’s term—“transplanting” their culture to the island.
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Research Article|
March 01 2024
The Boundary of Light: Buried Beings and Black Sacred Geographies
Rachel Grace Newman
Rachel Grace Newman will be joining Columbia University’s African American and African Diaspora Studies Department as an assistant professor in the fall of 2024. She specializes in the art history of the colonial Caribbean and contemporary art practices of the Caribbean and African diasporas. She is finishing her first book, an examination of Jamaica in the nineteenth century, the art of William Berryman, the beauty and pain of belonging and diaspora, and ancestral power.
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Small Axe (2024) 28 (1 (73)): 39–56.
Citation
Rachel Grace Newman; The Boundary of Light: Buried Beings and Black Sacred Geographies. Small Axe 1 March 2024; 28 (1 (73)): 39–56. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/07990537-11131187
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