by Sherry Jones
TOPICS AND QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION
1. Describe Josephine Baker’s home life in Saint Louis, Missouri. How is Josephine’s determination to succeed as a performer related to her desire to escape her family and its problems?
2. “I’ll turn you in to that truant officer. He’ll send your ass to reform school so fast it will make your head spin.” Describe Carrie McDonald’s behavior toward her daughter Josephine. Why does McDonald refuse to reveal Josephine’s father’s identity? How do Carrie’s maternal negligence and the family’s economic hardship contribute to Josephine’s victimization?
3. While convalescing from an injury caused by an abusive employer, Josephine experiences a vision of God crowning her in glory. How does this ecstatic vision sustain her throughout her life, and what does it suggest about her sense of purpose?
4. “Too young, too dark, too ugly. She would show him; she would show them all.” How does the racism that Josephine encounters as an entertainer in America compare to her treatment in France?
5. Why does Josephine’s performance in the finale of La Revue Nègre in Paris alter the course of her career? To what extent does Josephine’s participation in a performance that plays to stereotypes of black people as savages suggest she is intent on reclaiming her image? How much of the public scandal surrounding the Savage Dance seems grounded in nudity and how much in racial fetishism?
6. How does Josephine’s relationship with “Count” Pepito Abatino impact her personal and her professional life, both positively and negatively? In your discussion, you may want to consider how Abatino’s cultivation of Baker’s celebrity and her eponymous brands (a line of dolls, hair straightener products, her Chez Joséphine boîte) in Paris in the late 1920s helps to establish her as the city’s “It Girl.”
7. “ ‘We will transform you,’ Pepito had said in proposing the world tour . . . No more naked nichons; no more banana skirts; no more jungle acts. ‘You will depart from Paris a primitive caterpillar and return a sophisticated butterfly.’ ” In what ways does her world tour recalibrate Josephine’s focus as a performer and her consciousness as a citizen of the world?
8. Discuss Josephine’s experience with the rise of Nazism in Europe during the years leading up to World War II. What connections does she make between the rise of Hitler and racial and religious hatred with the racial violence she witnessed as young girl in Missouri?
9. Why does the powerful New York City theater owner Lee Shubert refuse to give Josephine star billing in Ziegfeld Follies? To what extent does his decision seem justified? What might explain the discrepancy in Josephine Baker’s critical reception in France and in the United States?
10. “ ‘She is more French than the French,’ Danny said.” What does Baker’s renunciation of her American citizenship in favor of becoming a French citizen suggest about her loyalty? Discuss Josephine’s willingness to help members of the French Resistance defeat the Nazis. How does Josephine’s celebrity serve as a useful cover for her intelligence reconnaissance on behalf of the Deuxième Bureau?
11. “If I can’t have babies, I don’t want to live.” What does Josephine Baker’s unfulfilled longing to bear a child of her own reveal? How do her losses of a series of unborn babies through abortion, miscarriages, and an emergency hysterectomy affect her? How does her Rainbow Tribe of twelve adopted children fulfill her dream of motherhood?
12. Discuss the arc of Josephine Baker’s sexuality over the course of the novel. In what ways is Baker a sexual victim, and how does she use her sexuality as a means to achieve an end? How does Josephine’s attraction to women and men contribute to the chameleonic quality of her sexual aura?
13. “She had two loves but only one had loved her back.” How does Josephine Baker’s signature song, “J’ai Deux Amours,” in which she acknowledges her dual loves for “my country and Paris,” reveal the tensions she experienced as an American citizen who felt most at home in her adopted country of France?
14. Discuss the significance of Josephine Baker’s 1951 show at the Copa City club in Miami, the first mixed-race nightclub performance in the American South. How does Baker’s insistence on an integrated audience serve as a catalyst for a wider inclusion of black Americans in other cultural events?
15. “She beat relentlessly against prejudice like waves breaking against a stone wall . . . and now she stands before her people to bear witness.” How does Josephine Baker’s speech at the March on Washington represent the culmination of her life’s work? How might her circuitous path as an entertainer be more completely appreciated in light of her lifetime commitment to racial justice?
ENHANCE YOUR BOOK CLUB
1. Josephine Baker’s emergence as a black ingénue in Paris came about at the height of the flapper movement, a time in history when young women were repudiating conservative Victorian culture by listening to jazz, smoking, and embracing their newfound liberation through short skirts, cropped hair, and cosmetics. For your book group’s next gathering, ask members to consider wearing jewelry, clothing, or other accessories inspired by the Roaring Twenties of Josephine Baker. How does the style of the Jazz Age differ from contemporary fashion? How important is the fashion of a milieu to its social history?
2. Josephine Baker’s comedic gifts were a key element of her appeal to audiences. Her goofiness and joie de vivre are especially evident in period footage of her revues and performances. During your next gathering as a group, view some of the many contemporaneous clips of Baker on YouTube. If your group is interested in viewing a feature-length film starring Baker, you may want to consult https://www.cmgww.com/stars/baker/, the official website of Josephine Baker, which not only includes a comprehensive list of her work but also includes a list of appealing quotes by Baker.
3. Josephine Baker is a remarkable study in contrasts—an American-born woman of color who finds herself especially beloved by white audiences in Europe; an illegitimate child of poverty who achieves international fame and personal wealth; an entertainer equally at home in a racy banana skirt and the uniform of the French Air Force; a woman unable to bear children of her own who eventually becomes a mother to twelve adopted children. With your group, examine some of the extraordinary qualities that define Josephine Baker and make her a compelling historical figure.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Author Photograph by Jones Brooks
SHERRY JONES is best known for her international bestseller The Jewel of Medina. She is also the author of The Sword of Medina; Four Sisters, All Queens; The Sharp Hook of Love; and the novella White Heart. She lives in Spokane, Washington, where, like Josephine Baker, she enjoys dancing, singing, eating, advocating for equality, and drinking champagne.
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ALSO BY SHERRY JONES
The Sharp Hook of Love
Four Sisters, All Queens
White Heart
The Sword of Medina
The Jewel of Medina
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Gallery Books
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This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, plac
es, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2018 by Sherry Jones
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First Gallery Books trade paperback edition December 2018
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Interior design by Bryden Spevak
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.
ISBN 978-1-5011-0244-8
ISBN 978-1-5011-0245-5 (ebook)