|
|
|
|
Cold War Multiculturalism: Revisiting Langston Hughes’ “Moscow Movie” |
|
| Abstract | Word Stems | Keywords | Association | Citation | Get this Document | Similar Titles |
|
|
Abstract:
|
In his autobiography I Wonder as I Wander (1956), Langston Hughes describes his 1932 journey to the USSR, devoting one chapter to the film project which brought him there. The Mezhrabpom studio’s Black and White set out to depict race relations in the American South, but was aborted soon after Hughes and 21 other African Americans arrived in Moscow. Mezhrabpom’s official reason for the project’s cancellation was script defects, and Hughes details some of these in his autobiography. Describing his initial reaction to the script as a mixture of laughter and tears, he argues that despite their good intentions, the Soviets were simply unable to grasp the realities of American race relations.
However, using archival materials found in Moscow and Atlanta, this paper demonstrates that Hughes’ 1956 depictions of Black and White are almost complete fabrications. The original Russian-language script, as well as the English variant given to the African American group, do bear inaccuracies, but none of those depicted in I Wonder as I Wander—and none so glaring. The goal of this paper is to weigh two possible explanations for Hughes’ 1956 depictions of the film. The first is McCarthyism and the anti-communism of the 1950s: in 1953, Hughes renounced his radical ties before the House Un-American Activities Committee, and his exaggeration of Soviet inauthenticity in I Wonder as I Wander might be seen as bolstering or justifying this renunciation. However, Hughes’ favorable depictions of the Soviet Union in the same work—particularly in his chapter on Soviet Central Asia—weakens this explanation.
The second explanation refines the first, focusing on U.S. notions of race and ethnicity following World War II—what I call “Cold War Multiculturalism.” Drawing from Nikhil Pal Singh and Mary Dudziak, the paper will relate the gains of the early Civil Rights Movement to American anti-communism in the 1950s. As Singh and Dudziak assert, formal equality (enfranchisement and anti-segregation) served to maintain consensus at home and counter Soviet propaganda abroad. I will argue that these gains tinge Hughes’ depictions of Black and White: civil rights, coupled with McCarthyism, led many African American intellectuals to turn from leftist internationalism to more insular notions of culture and community. In this light, Hughes’ depictions do not per se discredit the Soviet Union. Rather, they assert the primacy of racial and ethnic boundaries over the Soviet “friendship of peoples,” as well as national over transnational affiliations. Such assertions would become more prominent from the 1960s onward, with growing demands for official cultural recognition beyond formal equality—what is now referred to as “multiculturalism.”
I will conclude by suggesting that multiculturalism served as a weapon, alongside formal equality, in the U.S. Cold War arsenal. For instance, the State Department’s “jazz ambassadors” presented to the world a “culturally authentic U.S.,” implicitly opposed to a “culturally inauthentic USSR.” However, I will argue that Hughes’ fabrications complicate this binary, opening the way for a reexamination of Soviet “many-nation-ness” and its relevance for the U.S. |
|
 | Convention | | Submission, Review, and Scheduling! All Academic Convention can help with all of your abstract management needs and many more. Contact us today for a quote! |  | Submission - Custom fields, multiple submission types, tracks, audio visual, multiple upload formats, automatic conversion to pdf. |  | Review - Peer Review, Bulk reviewer assignment, bulk emails, ranking, z-score statistics, and multiple worksheets! |  | Reports - Many standard and custom reports generated while you wait. Print programs with participant indexes, event grids, and more! |  | Scheduling - Flexible and convenient grid scheduling within rooms and buildings. Conflict checking and advanced filtering. |  | Communication - Bulk email tools to help your administrators send reminders and responses. Use form letters, a message center, and much more! |  | Management - Search tools, duplicate people management, editing tools, submission transfers, many tools to manage a variety of conference management headaches! | | Click here for more information. |
|
|
Association:
Name: American Studies Association URL: http://www.theasa.net
|
Citation:
|
MLA Citation:
| Lee, Steven. "Cold War Multiculturalism: Revisiting Langston Hughes’ “Moscow Movie”" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Studies Association, Oct 12, 2006 <Not Available>. 2009-05-24 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p113563_index.html> |
APA Citation:
| Lee, S. , 2006-10-12 "Cold War Multiculturalism: Revisiting Langston Hughes’ “Moscow Movie”" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Studies Association <Not Available>. 2009-05-24 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p113563_index.html |
Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Abstract: In his autobiography I Wonder as I Wander (1956), Langston Hughes describes his 1932 journey to the USSR, devoting one chapter to the film project which brought him there. The Mezhrabpom studio’s Black and White set out to depict race relations in the American South, but was aborted soon after Hughes and 21 other African Americans arrived in Moscow. Mezhrabpom’s official reason for the project’s cancellation was script defects, and Hughes details some of these in his autobiography. Describing his initial reaction to the script as a mixture of laughter and tears, he argues that despite their good intentions, the Soviets were simply unable to grasp the realities of American race relations.
However, using archival materials found in Moscow and Atlanta, this paper demonstrates that Hughes’ 1956 depictions of Black and White are almost complete fabrications. The original Russian-language script, as well as the English variant given to the African American group, do bear inaccuracies, but none of those depicted in I Wonder as I Wander—and none so glaring. The goal of this paper is to weigh two possible explanations for Hughes’ 1956 depictions of the film. The first is McCarthyism and the anti-communism of the 1950s: in 1953, Hughes renounced his radical ties before the House Un-American Activities Committee, and his exaggeration of Soviet inauthenticity in I Wonder as I Wander might be seen as bolstering or justifying this renunciation. However, Hughes’ favorable depictions of the Soviet Union in the same work—particularly in his chapter on Soviet Central Asia—weakens this explanation.
The second explanation refines the first, focusing on U.S. notions of race and ethnicity following World War II—what I call “Cold War Multiculturalism.” Drawing from Nikhil Pal Singh and Mary Dudziak, the paper will relate the gains of the early Civil Rights Movement to American anti-communism in the 1950s. As Singh and Dudziak assert, formal equality (enfranchisement and anti-segregation) served to maintain consensus at home and counter Soviet propaganda abroad. I will argue that these gains tinge Hughes’ depictions of Black and White: civil rights, coupled with McCarthyism, led many African American intellectuals to turn from leftist internationalism to more insular notions of culture and community. In this light, Hughes’ depictions do not per se discredit the Soviet Union. Rather, they assert the primacy of racial and ethnic boundaries over the Soviet “friendship of peoples,” as well as national over transnational affiliations. Such assertions would become more prominent from the 1960s onward, with growing demands for official cultural recognition beyond formal equality—what is now referred to as “multiculturalism.”
I will conclude by suggesting that multiculturalism served as a weapon, alongside formal equality, in the U.S. Cold War arsenal. For instance, the State Department’s “jazz ambassadors” presented to the world a “culturally authentic U.S.,” implicitly opposed to a “culturally inauthentic USSR.” However, I will argue that Hughes’ fabrications complicate this binary, opening the way for a reexamination of Soviet “many-nation-ness” and its relevance for the U.S. |
Get this Document:
Find this citation or document at one or all of these locations below. The links below may have the citation or the entire document for free or you may purchase access to the document. Clicking on these links will change the site you're on and empty your shopping cart.
Similar Titles:
The Moscow Diplomatic Corps and the End of the Cold War
Langston Hughes and the Poetry of a Dream Legally Deferred
Troubled Island: Langston Hughes and the Haitian Occupation
|
|