Blackface and the American Way of Entertainment
by Rhae Lynn Barnes
A groundbreaking history, decades in the making, that chronicles how blackface dominated American society culturally, financially, and racially for nearly two centuries.
Never before has the disturbing story of blackface and its piercing reflection of American society been so comprehensively told. With Darkology, Princeton historian Rhae Lynn Barnes meticulously unravels the complex, subterranean, and all-too-often expunged history of "Darkology"―the insidious study, commodification, and dehumanization of Black life, through which performers caricatured the enslaved and formerly enslaved for their supposed subservience and happy demeanor.
Given the extraordinary research reflected in Darkology, it's not surprising that Barnes spent twenty years tracking down "fading photographs, old movies, bureaucratic detritus, moldy scripts, and living witnesses, assembling an impressive archive that allowed her to demonstrate the astonishingly broad reach of blackface minstrelsy" (Laurel Thatcher Ulrich). Painstakingly piecing together these scattered shards of evidence, Barnes reveals the shocking extent to which blackface took center stage in every era of American history.
This was not a fringe activity. By 1830, as political resistance to slavery grew, blackface exploded from a niche performance into a venomous national export. Within a decade, hardly a theater in the country didn't put on minstrel shows. Following the Civil War, this grotesque entertainment soared, seeping from professional theaters into everyday amateur shows, print, and advertisements. It was everywhere: Elks Clubs, religious institutions, battlefields, universities, and schools. It wasn't just in the Jim Crow era; it defined it. The very name "Jim Crow" derives from minstrelsy's founding character.
Darkology dismantles the myth that blackface was a fleeting, post–Civil War phenomenon. Even in eras known for liberal progressivism, it flourished. Barnes unearths the startling fact that four-term president Franklin D. Roosevelt was a devotee who died hours before a blackface show he had commissioned at Warm Springs. It permeated U.S. military bases and was even used in World War II Japanese American concentration camps and German POW camps as a bizarre tool of "Americanization."
After WWII, the tide began to turn as Black veterans and mothers in places like suburban California protested the practice in schools. Still, blackface performances proved resilient, surfacing as late as 1969 at the University of Vermont. Even as the Civil Rights movement fought for equality, blackface remained present in American politics and white supremacist organizing through the Nixon and Ford administrations, its legacy still percolating in variable forms today.
By tracing minstrelsy's evolution through oral histories, material culture, and a wide range of multimedia sources, Barnes's "masterpiece" (David Blight) forces us to reckon with the myriad ways the American Dream wore blackface. Recasting this American story with "vivid and engaging storytelling" (Howard French), Darkology is a landmark work that peers beneath the boulders deliberately obscuring our past―illuminating a path toward a more just and equal society in America's future.
"Essential...[Barnes'] immensely readable work covers more than a hundred years of white America's embrace of this sordid form of entertainment...An important and necessarily uncomfortable work on a disturbing legacy." ―Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"This groundbreaking history of blackface in the United States uncovers not only the formation of the racist art form but its hold on culture and politics...meticulously researched...a landmark work." ―Library Journal (starred review)
"The scope and tenacity of Barnes' research is impressive, as she reveals blackface as a cultural institution supported by white officials at every level of government ... Darkology tells the story of a genre that pervaded American culture and politics across decades, taking care along the way to highlight the voices of those who resisted." ―Booklist
"Rhae Lynn Barnes's Darkology is not only exemplary scholarship for its sharp original material, precision, and care, its vivid and engaging storytelling recreates a shameless world where the most popular forms of American entertainment treated the demeaning of Black people as the most natural of things." ―Howard French, author of Born in Blackness and The Second Emancipation
"It is probably hard for present day Americans to believe how pervasive 'blackface' was during the 19th through the 20th centuries. Used as 'entertainment' in virtually all types of institutions in the country, it telegraphed the contempt in which Black people were held. Meticulously researched and fluidly written, Darkology is a necessary exploration of this revealing and disturbing aspect of American history." ―Annette Gordon-Reed, author of the Pulitzer Prize–winning The Hemingses of Monticello
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Any "Author Information" displayed below reflects the author's biography at the time this particular book was published.
Rhae Lynn Barnes is an assistant professor of American cultural history at Princeton University and the Sheila Biddle Ford Foundation Fellow at the Hutchins Center for African & African American Research at Harvard University.

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