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Performing Whiteness, Troubling Blackness: Afropolitanism and the Visual Politics of Black Bodies in YouTube Videos

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2025

Suzie Telep*
Affiliation:
University of Paris, France
*
Contact Suzie Telep at Université de Paris, Faculté de Sciences Humaines et Sociales, 45 rue des Saints-Pères, 75006 Paris, France (suzielaetitia@hotmail.fr).
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Abstract

This article explores the relation between linguistic and nonlinguistic signs in enregisterment processes (Agha 2007) through the analysis of multimodal images of racial otherness in YouTube videos. It aims to show the role of images in indexing social meaning and performing hegemonic Whiteness among metropolitan Cameroonian-French elites living in Paris, through the use of a specific semiotic register indexing an “Afropolitan” persona – an elite, socially mobile and transnational type of Blackness. By focusing on the poiesis of “image-texts” (Nakassis 2019), this article will contribute to understanding the “total semiotic fact” of racial and social differentiation. It will also demonstrate that these images constitute a counter-discourse and are political acts that negotiate agency and contest power relations.

Information

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2021 Semiosis Research Center at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies. All rights reserved.
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Figure 1. Logo of RésAfrique

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Figure 2. Hall of the Gala Exception

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Figure 3. Women at the Gala

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Figure 4. Models at the Gala after a show

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Figure 5. Men and women at the Gala

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Figure 6. Men and women at the Gala

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Figure 7. Custom and Co fashion show

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Figure 8. Make Me Proud fashion show

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Figure 9. The Paradox-Sal dance show