ABSTRACT

Josephine Baker’s performances and writings of the years 1925-1936 form an archive of the transatlantic dimensions and expressions of the Harlem Renaissance. Like many African American performers of the era, Baker found her audience in Europe, where the phenomenal popularity of black Americans came to be known as le tumulte noir, or “black rage.” She made her debut in La Revue Nègre (1925), and its promotional posters, designed by Paul Colin, remain the most controversial and important images of Josephine Baker. After her danse sauvage with Joe Alex in La Revue Nègre, Baker was both hailed as a primitivist icon and denounced as an indecent savage by Parisian critics. Today, “Although many people celebrate Baker’s career, many could argue that her initial success was achieved at the expense of her integrity and the principles of African Americans” (Barnwell 1997, 86). According to Sharpley-Whiting (1999), Baker doubtless “realized that her popularity . . . depended on her exploitation of French exoticist impulses . . . [and] the Black Venus narrative” (107). Baker achieved greater financial success and artistic freedom in France than she might have had in the United States, but she did not escape the problem of realizing her artistic ambitions within the limitations of stereotypical black roles. Still, like many artists of the Harlem Renaissance, Baker sought

to use entertainment to improve race relations, and she consistently praised the relatively liberal racial policies of the French, as an oblique critique of American racism.