2014 Runner-Up, MLA Prize in United States Latina and Latino and
Chicana and Chicano Literary and Cultural Studies
In Unbecoming Blackness, Antonio López uncovers an important, otherwise
unrecognized century-long archive of literature and performance that
reveals Cuban America as a space of overlapping Cuban and African
diasporic experiences.
López shows how Afro-Cuban writers and performers in the U.S. align
Cuban black and mulatto identities, often subsumed in the mixed-race and
postracial Cuban national imaginaries, with the material and symbolic
blackness of African Americans and other Afro-Latinas/os. In the works
of Alberto O'Farrill, Eusebia Cosme, Rómulo Lachatañeré, and others,
Afro-Cubanness articulates the African diasporic experience in ways that
deprive negro and mulato configurations of an exclusive link with Cuban
nationalism. Instead, what is invoked is an "unbecoming" relationship
between Afro-Cubans in the U.S and their domestic black counterparts.
The transformations in Cuban racial identity across the hemisphere,
represented powerfully in the literary and performance cultures of
Afro-Cubans in the U.S., provide the fullest account of a transnational
Cuba, one in which the Cuban American emerges as Afro-Cuban-American,
and the Latino as Afro-Latino.