Imitationโs Racialization in the Midst of Anglo-American Empire, 1865 โ 1920
Associate Professor of Communication Arts & Sciences
Dr. Wilsonโs project explores the historical and rhetorical terrain through which the meaning and practice of โimitationโ was racialized in the midst of Anglo-American empire. He argues that imitation (mimesis and imitation in various intellectual traditions) became a contested concept in the long, transatlantic Nineteenth Century. Through the discourse of white elites, the claim that people of color, especially Black Americans, were talented imitators of Anglo-culture but incapable of appropriating that culture entered the public consciousness. The rhetoric that supported this claim not only created a powerful racist stereotype, it also shaped the sliding signifier of race such that inherent racial differences remained commonsense even as communities of color established their social and political power in a โpost-slaveryโ world. Through the interpretive analysis of print media, the private correspondence of scientists and educators, and the documents of colonial administrators, Wilson explains how imitationโs racialization kept people of color in a subaltern position after legal emancipation in the United States, Great Britain, and throughout the Anglo-American Empire.