International Summer Graduate Seminar

Summer 2006

Performing African Diasporas

This third year of the seminar will focus on black performativity and cultural production from the perspective of aesthetics, poetics, and representation in four weekly modules. The relationship between
cultural production, performance, and representation, on the one hand, and the production of black subjectivity and cognitively inscribed popular conceptions of blackness on the other, will be examined. Popular culture and the deployment of literary, visual, auditory, and other forms of sensory technologies will be explored and interrogated,
historicized and framed within the practices of conjunctural and comparative analysis. These deployments will be examined in the production and contestation of blackness and black subjectivity; in the
reinforcement and contestation of black inferiority; in the production and contestation of racialized discourses of difference; in the production of ideologies of racialized inferiority, superiority, and equality; and in politics of rebellion, opposition, reversal, transformation and reinforcement. Ambiguity, contradiction, conflict,
and opposition will be issues that form part of the examination of African diasporic performativities and cultural production.

We expect the admitted seminar participants to arrive in Miami on Wednesday, July 5th, 2006. Two introductory sessions, during which theorizing about Diaspora will be discussed, will take place on Thursday, July 6th and Friday, July 7th. The conference that will mark the end of the seminar will take place on Monday, August 7th, 2006. This will give more time to the enrolled seminar participants to prepare a "final" draft of their paper, which will be presented during the conference.

 

Week 1: "Performance as Method"

This module will examine African diasporic performances in the public and private spheres, both collective and individual, as a method through which black subjectivities may be interrogated, analyzed, and communicated. It will also focus on the methodologies through which black subjectivities are produced through performance. The focus will be on the interrogation of the performance of African diasporic aesthetics, poetics, and politics, and their production and reproduction.

Week 2: "Festivities and Celebrations: Aesthetics, Poetics, and Politics"

This module will examine public collective performances of black subjectivities, their imbrications in the structural politics of blackness, their function as manifesto, their signification of the black presence nationally, transnationally, and in particular localized sociogeographies, and their role in the production of diasporic subjectivities. Festivities and celebrations will be examined with respect to local social geographies, comparatively in national, trans-national, and inter-national dimensions. The focus will be on the different and conflicting representations and practices of black subjectivity and their insertion in the particularities of their specific social geographies.

Carlos Julião Cortejo da rainha negra na Festa de Reis, 1776, Aquarela colorida.


Week 3: "Visualizing Blackness: Corporeality, Collectivity, and Subjectivity"


This module will examine the deployment of visuality in the production of black subjectivity, in the representations of blackness and its contestations, in the poetics and the aesthetics of blackness, and in the way these imageries are deployed in the structural politics of race. The seminar will focus on the visualization of black bodies, of black collective identities, and on the relationship between visuality and the production of black subjectivity.


Mardi Gras Indian, New Orleans

Week 4: "Popular Culture: The Marketing of Blackness"

This module will focus on the production, distribution and consumption of black popular cultures and their relationships to the market forces that drive such production, distribution, and consumption. The emphasis will be on the relationship between the representations of blackness and their cognitive constructions in popular imagination; how black subjectivities are influenced by market forces; how conceptualizations of racialized peoplehood and belonging are affected by the marketing of black popular cultures, etc. The module will also focus on marketing as the instrumentality for the hybridized incorporation of black forms into the aesthetics, poetics, and discursive practices of the nation through incorporation into mainstream culture. The focus will also be upon the relationship between market forces and the production of transnational black identification.

Ecuadorian advertisement for a brand of tires (1980s)


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Art from http://www.zyama.com/

This seminar is made possible thanks to a grant from the Ford Foundation.