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Itutu

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Itutu, a Yoruba word that is translatable as "cool", has been used by the Yoruba and more recently by Africanist art historians to describe the aesthetic that characterizes much Yoruba and some African-American art. An Itutu aesthetic includes the appearance of physical or sexual beauty whilst having a humble, calm, collected face that is found in much Yoruba sculpture. It has been suggested by Robert Farris Thompson of Yale University that Itutu is the origin of the American idea of the "cool". His 1973 article "An Aesthetic of the Cool" traces the idea of Itutu from the Yoruba to several other African civilizations and finally to the Americas, where the descendants of Africans perpetuated the importance of being "cool".[1]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Thompson, Robert Farris (1 January 1973). "An Aesthetic of the Cool". African Arts. 7 (1): 41–91. doi:10.2307/3334749. JSTOR 3334749.
  2. ^ Arielli, Emanuele (2020). "Coolness, Aesthetic Agency and Self-Construction". Zonemoda Journal. 1 (10): 15–22. Both 'Sprezzatura' and 'Itutu' express a particular kind of freedom: freedom as naturalness (I am what I am, I don't need to make the effort to be something else), and freedom from preoccupations (I am indifferent and unaffected toward external judgment; I am carefree or, better, I don't care).