Neerkijken en rondzien: Twee reizigers uit Nederland portretteren en presenteren Harlem

Translated title of the contribution: Looking down and looking around: Two travelers portray and present Harlem

Babs Boter, Lonneke Geerlings

Research output: Contribution to JournalReview articleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Looking down and looking around: Two travelers portray and present Harlem
In the 1930s and 1950s two white Dutch writers, Mary Pos (1904-87) and Rosey Pool (1905-71), visited the New York neighborhood of Harlem. They reported on these journeys in letters, newspaper articles, monographs, and lectures. Jointly, this material offers us a valuable contemporary portrait of Harlem, and is a source for reconstructing the ways in which these women acted as cultural mediators between the Netherlands and the black community in New York. In their work Pos and Pool demonstrate rather different responses to Harlem. But they appear to be similar in their (partial) confirmation of contemporary racial and ethnic discourses, and in their questioning and even rejection of some of the gender conventions of their time.
Translated title of the contributionLooking down and looking around: Two travelers portray and present Harlem
Original languageDutch
Pages (from-to)393-413
Number of pages21
JournalTijdschrift voor Geschiedenis
Volume129
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016

Keywords

  • Cultural mediators
  • Harlem
  • Travel
  • Travel writing

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