Older people negotiating dance routines, intimacy, and racialized differences provide a focal point for an ethnography of danzon in Veracruz, the Mexican city closely associated with the music-dance genre. Hettie Malcomson draws upon on-site research with semi-professional musicians and amateur dancers to reveal how danzon connects, and does not connect, to blackness, joyousness, nostalgia, ageing, and romance. Challenging pervasive utopian views of danzon, Malcomson uses the idea of ambivalence to explore the frictions and opportunities created by seemingly contrary sentiments, ideas, sensations, and impulses. Interspersed with experimental ethnographic vignettes, her account takes readers into black and mestizo elements of local identity in Veracruz, nostalgic and newer styles of music and dance, and the friendships, romances, and rivalries at the heart of regular danzon performance and its complex social world. Fine-grained and evocative, Danzon Days journeys to one of the genre's essential cities to provide new perspectives on aging and romance and new explorations of nostalgia and ambivalence.
Hettie Malcomson is an associate professor of ethnomusicology and social anthropology at the University of Southampton.
Vignette 1. Gerardo, Elena, and Miguel [Fiction] Introduction. Danzon, Veracruz, and Ambivalence Vignette 2. Teresita [Fiction] Chapter 1. Racial Ambivalence: Veracruz, Blackness, and Danzon Vignette 3. Pancho [Fiction] Chapter 2. Ambivalent Nostalgia: Histories and Memories of the Port and Its Danzon Vignette 4. Renata [Fiction] Chapter 3. Elegant Moves: Modernist Aesthetics and Danzon in Veracruz Vignette 5. Lulu and Antonio [Fiction] Chapter 4. Moves to Rescue: Reviving the Dance, State Sponsorship, and Power Vignette 6. Hettie and Uriel Chapter 5. United in a Viper's Nest: Group Dynamics, Conviviality, and Rivalry Vignette 7. Carmen and Ernesto [Fiction] Chapter 6. Loving Ambivalence: Dance Groups, Amorous Encounters, and Ageing Bodies Vignette 8. Diana [Fiction] Acknowledgments Notes Glossary Select Discography Select Filmography Bibliography Index
"Malcomson provides a superb ethnographic study of ambivalence in lived experience: danzon is disciplinary and jealously competitive, yet it gives aficionados room to be creative and convivial, and to weave identities around narratives of blackness and race mixture, local histories, and personal trajectories. A brilliant exploration of how people navigate the contradictions of everyday life."--Peter Wade, coeditor of Against Racism: Organizing for Social Change in Latin America