Posts Tagged ‘Africa Culture & Arts’
Sara’s story, a symbol of subjugation and humiliation, her homecoming will be a spiritual thing
Sara is the short-name used these days for Saartjie Baartman, a Khoisan slave woman who at the tender age of 20 was taken from Cape Town to London and then on to Paris to be displayed naked in their streets and at their circuses like an animal her European audiences viewed her to be. Her story is a tearful and moving one. It is at once the story of an everyday woman, a human being, one of us, treated in the most grotesque ways, used as “scientific proof” of “European white superiority,” But it is also a story about the more widespread “social, political, scientific and philosophical assumptions which transformed one young African woman into a representation of savage sexuality and racial inferiority.” Finally, her story is one that provokes us to look in some detail at the power of imagery to form opinions, and the way such power has been employed to depict people of color, especially women of color. Read the rest of this entry »