@article{c92e25a573fe41c8af018d54b293ac15,
title = "Tristes tropique in jacqueline bishop{\textquoteright}s patchwork aesthetics",
author = "Cheryl Sterling",
note = "Funding Information: Cheryl Sterling is an associate professor of English and director of the African Studies Program at Penn State University, a Fulbright Scholar, and the recipient of numerous grants including the Organization of American States fellowship. Her award-winning book African Roots, Brazilian Rites: Cultural and National Identity (Palgrave 2012) investigates African roots matrix ideologies in the literary and performance traditions of Afro-Brazilians, and her edited volume, Transnational Trills: Music and Art in the Africana World (Cambridge SP, 2019), explores the overlap of politics and creative production in the arts. She is currently working on a book that creates aesthetic theory based on Yoruba orisha paradigms to read African and African Diasporic texts and images.
[email protected]",
year = "2020",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1162/afar_a_00513",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "53",
pages = "38--49",
journal = "African Arts",
issn = "0001-9933",
publisher = "MIT Press Journals",
number = "1",
}