Losing Manhood
In: Qui parle: critical humanities and social sciences, Band 25, Heft 1-2, S. 95-136
ISSN: 1938-8020
6 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Qui parle: critical humanities and social sciences, Band 25, Heft 1-2, S. 95-136
ISSN: 1938-8020
In: Feminist studies: FS, Band 39, Heft 3, S. 669-685
ISSN: 2153-3873
In: GLQ: a journal of lesbian and gay studies, Band 17, Heft 2-3, S. 357-363
ISSN: 1527-9375
My essay is a meditation on David Marriott's corpus of writing. It attempts to foreground some of the implications of his work for the future direction of queer theory, feminism, and scholarly attention to race. In making a demand on our thinking and sensibilities, his contribution asks us to bear witness to past and ghostly forms of violence that seek to fix blackness as the ultimate signifier of unassimilable difference.
The term ?no humans involved? emerged shortly after the 1991 beating of Rodney King, when it was discovered that the Los Angeles Police Department was using the term as a shorthand for casework that involved Black and Latino men and sex workers. In 1994, Jamaican scholar and theorist Sylvia Wynter challenged her academic colleagues to consider how they themselves might be contributing to the cultural mindset that gave rise to this exclusionary definition of human. In particular, Wynter highlighted the strong influence the notion of race has on the definition of the human and the social hierarchies and injustices that result from this link.0No Humans Involved collects works by contemporary artists that serve as a response to Wynter?s prompt. Among the artists featured are Eddie Aparicio, who uses large-scale, rubber casts of trees to document social and economic relationships between Latin America and the United States; Tau Lewis, a multidisciplinary artist who creates portraits out of culturally relevant found objects and recycled materials; and Wilmer Wilson IV, who investigates the marginalization of Black bodies in social relations through performance, sculpture, photography and other mediums. This collection of artworks from a diverse group of artists provides a contemporary response to Wynter?s call to action, addressing the social divisions present today and exploring opportunities for social unity.00Exhibition: Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, USA (10.10.2021-09.01.2022)
In: GLQ: a journal of lesbian and gay studies, Band 21, Heft 2-3, S. 209-248
ISSN: 1527-9375
Frontmatter -- CONTENTS -- Introduction -- PART I Post-Identity Politics -- Chapter One Interview with Cassils -- Chapter Two From SF -- Chapter Three From Nomadic Theory (2011) -- Chapter Four From Towards a New Class of Being -- Chapter Five A Feminist Genealogy of Posthuman Aesthetics in the Visual Arts (2016) -- Chapter Six Animality and Blackness (2020) -- Chapter Seven Asserting Aboriginal Territories in Cyberspace -- Chapter Eight From Posthumanism and the Graphic Novel in Latin America (2017) -- Chapter Nine Witnessing Animals -- Chapter Ten Video Dog Star -- Chapter Eleven Interview with Garry Marvin -- Chapter Twelve From Plant Thinking -- Chapter Thirteen A Program for Plants (2016) -- Chapter Fourteen No Manifesto (1965, 2008) -- PART II Material Dimensions -- Chapter Fifteen Interview with Nandipha Mntambo -- Chapter Sixteen Locating Me in Order to See You (2007) -- Chapter Seventeen From The Rendered Material of Film Stock (2009) -- Chapter Eighteen Interview with Heide Hatry -- Chapter Nineteen On Some Limits of Materiality in Art History (2008) -- Chapter Twenty Elephants in the Room -- Chapter Twenty-One From Second Skins -- Chapter Twenty-Two Hunting and Gathering as Ways of Perceiving the Environment (2012) -- Chapter Twenty-Three Super-natural Futures -- Chapter Twenty-Four Rhythms of Relation -- Chapter Twenty-Five Proliferation, Extinction, and an Anthropocene Aesthetic (2017) -- Chapter Twenty-Six Interview with Graham Harman -- Chapter Twenty-Seven From Dark Ecology (2016) -- Chapter Twenty-Eight From What Is the Measure of Nothingness? -- PART III Registering Interconnectedness -- Chapter Twenty-Nine Interview with Kathy High -- Chapter Thirty From Writing Machines (2002) -- Chapter Thirty-One From Unexpress the Expressible (2012) -- Chapter Thirty-Two Introduction to Nocturnal Fabulations -- Chapter Thirty-Three Posthuman Performance (2010) -- Chapter Thirty-Four Critical Relationality -- Chapter Thirty-Five Ecosex ManiFesto (2011) -- Chapter Thirty-Six Interview with Jane Bennett -- Chapter Thirty-Seven Interview with Pauline Oliveros -- Chapter Thirty-Eight Animals, Nostalgia and Zimbawe's Rural Landscape in the Poetry of Chenjerai Hove and Musaemura Zimunya (2016) -- Chapter Thirty-Nine Waiting for Gaia -- Chapter Forty Interview with Newton Harrison -- Chapter Forty-One Seeds = Future (2013) -- PART IV Emerging Ecologies -- Chapter Forty-Two Interview with Katherine McKittrick: (2021) -- Chapter Forty-Three Interview with Doo-Sung-Yoo -- Chapter Forty-Four Interview with Kelly Jazvac -- Chapter Forty-Five A Questionnaire on Materialisms -- Chapter Forty-Six Art as Remembrance and Trace in Post-Conflict Latin America (2016) -- Chapter Forty-Seven Interview With Manuela Rossini -- Chapter Forty-Eight African Afro-futurism -- Chapter Forty-Nine Whose Anthropocene? A Response (2016) -- Chapter Fifty Unruly Edges -- Chapter Fifty-One The Rise of Cheap Nature (2016) -- Chapter Fifty-Two From Forensic Architecture -- Chapter Fifty-Three Letters to Dear Climate (2017) -- Coda -- LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS -- INDEX