The Anticolonial Museum

The Anticolonial Museum
Author: Bruno Brulon Soares
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 183
Release: 2023-08-18
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781000932690

Download The Anticolonial Museum Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The Anticolonial Museum acknowledges some of the consequences of colonialism in the current work of museums. Looking at museum theory in a critical way, it proposes a radical revision of museums’ rhetoric on decolonisation, as well as their public image and practices. Bringing together a collection of reflections on decolonisation through the observation of museum performance and discourse, the author considers current practices in response to the social claims of marginalised groups and activists. Drawing from a genealogy of decolonial thinking in museology, Brulon Soares identifies the inherent paradoxes reflected in museum work. The book’s focus is not exclusively on the reality of colonised countries, nor on the context of former imperialist nations—instead, it raises anticolonial questions, finding common ground between the different actors involved in the museum: scholars, students, curators, practitioners, community members and Indigenous creators. One of the central aims of this book is to view the museum as a locus for multiple enunciations, thus identifying in museum practice the active possibility of reconnecting subjectivities and restoring material fluxes to effectively repair the bonds that have been frayed by colonialism and an expanding modernity. The Anticolonial Museum will be of great interest to researchers and students engaged in the study of decolonisation. It will also be essential for practitioners who wish to reconsider the impact of coloniality on their own position and everyday practice.

Hydrofeminist Thinking With Oceans

Hydrofeminist Thinking With Oceans
Author: Tamara Shefer,Vivienne Bozalek,Nike Romano
Publsiher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 251
Release: 2023-12-19
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9781003827870

Download Hydrofeminist Thinking With Oceans Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Hydrofeminist Thinking with Oceans brings together authors who are thinking in, with and through the spaces of ocean/s and beaches in South African contexts to make alternative knowledges towards a justice-to-come and flourishing at a planetary level. Primary scholarly locations for this work include feminist new materialist and post-humanist thinking, and specifically locates itself within hydrofeminist thinking. Together with a foreword by Astrida Neimanis, the chapters in this book explore both land and water with oceans as powerfully political spaces, globally and locally entangled in the violences of settler colonialism, land dispossession, slavery, transnational labour exploitation, extractivism and omnicides. South Africa is a productive space to engage in such scholarship. While there is a growing body of literature that works within and across disciplines on the sea and bodies of water to think critically about the damages of centuries of colonisation and continued extractivist capitalism, there remains little work that explores this burgeoning thinking in global Southern, and more particularly South African contexts. South African histories of colonisation, slavery and more recently apartheid, which are saturated in the oceans, are only recently being explored through oceanic logics. This volume offers valuable Southern contributions and rich situated narratives to such hydrofeminist thinking. It also brings diverse and more marginal knowledges to bear on the project of generating imaginative alternatives to hegemonic colonial and patriarchal logics in the academy and elsewhere. While primarily located in a South African context, the volume speaks well to globalised concerns for justice and environmental challenges both in human societies and in relation to other species and planetary crises. The chapters, which will be of interest to scholars, activists and other civil society stakeholders, share inspiring, rich examples of diverse scholarship, activism and art in these contexts, extending international scholarship that thinks in/on/with ocean/s, littoral zones and bodies of water. The book offers ethico-political perspectives on the role of research in ocean governance, policy development and collective decision-making for ecological justice. This book is suitable for students and scholars of post-qualitative, feminist, new materialist, embodied, arts-based and hydrofeminist methods in education, environmental humanities and the social sciences.

Art Activism for an Anticolonial Future

Art Activism for an Anticolonial Future
Author: Carlos Garrido Castellano
Publsiher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 467
Release: 2021-10-01
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9781438485744

Download Art Activism for an Anticolonial Future Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Analyzing the confluence between coloniality and activist art, Art Activism for an Anticolonial Future argues that there is much to gain from approaching contemporary politically committed art practices from the angle of anticolonial, postcolonial, and decolonial struggles. These struggles inspired a vast yet underexplored set of ideas about art and cultural practices and did so decades before the acceptance of radical artistic practices by mainstream art institutions. Carlos Garrido Castellano argues that art activism has been confined to a limited spatial and temporal framework—that of Western culture and the modernist avant-garde. Assumptions about the individual creator and the belated arrival of derivative avant-garde aesthetics to the periphery have generated a narrow view of “political art” at the expense of our capacity to perceive a truly global alternative praxis. Garrido Castellano then illuminates such a praxis, focusing attention on socially engaged art from the Global South, challenging the supposed universality of Western artistic norms, and demonstrating the role of art in promoting and configuring a collective critical consciousness in postcolonial public spheres. This book is freely available in an open access edition thanks to Knowledge Unlatched—an initiative that provides libraries and institutions with a centralized platform to support OA collections and from leading publishing houses and OA initiatives. Learn more at the Knowledge Unlatched website at: https://www.knowledgeunlatched.org/, and access the book online at the SUNY Open Access Repository at http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12648/7166.

The Anticolonial Transnational

The Anticolonial Transnational
Author: Erez Manela,Heather Streets-Salter
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 331
Release: 2023-08-24
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781009359122

Download The Anticolonial Transnational Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This volume is the first to explore transnational anticolonialism as a general global phenomenon that spanned the entire twentieth century. Its collected essays model both a broadening of the issues under consideration and the collaboration necessary to do justice to the scope of this vibrant field. They showcase new work by scholars who explore the anticolonial transnational in multiple geographical regions, from a variety of perspectives, and at many different times across the long twentieth century. Revealing that anticolonial movements everywhere in this period were invariably transnational in terms of their imaginaries, mobilities, and networks, these essays also demonstrate that centering transnational connections can change our understanding of the anticolonial past. The legacies of transnational anticolonial strategies and networks fundamentally shaped the present. Together, these essays present a fresh, kaleidoscopic view of the geographical, chronological, and thematic possibilities of the global anticolonial transnational.

The Anticolonial Front

The Anticolonial Front
Author: John Munro
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 347
Release: 2017-09-21
Genre: HISTORY
ISBN: 9781107188051

Download The Anticolonial Front Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book connects the Black freedom struggle in the United States to liberation movements across the globe.

Locating the Global

Locating the Global
Author: Holger Weiss
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 502
Release: 2020-08-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 9783110670714

Download Locating the Global Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This volume adds to the plurality of global histories by locating the global through its articulation and manifestation within particular localities. It accomplishes this by bringing together interlinked case-studies that analyse various temporal and spatial dimensions of the global in the local and the interactions between the local and the global. The case-studies apply a spatial approach to analyse how global questions of space, movement, networks, borders, and territory are worked out at a local level. The material draws on the Nordic countries, Europe, the Atlantic world, Africa, and Australia and ranges from the seventeenth to the twentieth century. It is further divided into sections that address topics such as the translocality of humans and goods, local articulations of identities and globalities, parliamentarism and anti-colonialism, the organization of knowledge and the construction of spaces of representation and memory.

Reclaiming Artistic Research

Reclaiming Artistic Research
Author: Katayoun Arian,Lawrence Abu Hamdan,Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev,Stephanie Dinkins,Sher Doruff,Em'kal Eyongakpa,Ryan Gander,Mario García Torres,Liam Gillick,Natasha Ginwala,Sky Hopinka,Manuela Infante,Euridice Zaituna Kala,Grada Kilomba,Yo-Yo Lin,Cannupa Hanska Luger,Sarat Maharaj,Emma Moore,Richard Mosse,Rabih Mroué,Christian Nyampeta,Yuri Pattison,Falke Pisano,Sarah Rifky,Samson Young,Katarina Zdjelar
Publsiher: Hatje Cantz Verlag
Total Pages: 547
Release: 2024-04-24
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9783775756761

Download Reclaiming Artistic Research Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This expanded second edition of Reclaiming Artistic Research explores artistic research in dialogue with 24 artists worldwide, reclaiming it from academic associations of the term. Embracing artists' dynamic engagement with other fields, it foregrounds the material, spatial, embodied, organizational, choreographic, and technological ways of knowing and unknowing specific to contemporary artistic inquiry. The second edition features a new text by the author and four new artist dialogues to reflect on the changing stakes of artistic research in the wake of the global pandemic, a widespread reckoning with social justice, the growing role of artificial intelligence, and the urgent reality of climate change. LUCY COTTER (*1973, Ireland) is a writer, curator, and artist. She was Curator of the Dutch Pavilion, 57th Venice Biennale, 2017, and Curator in Residence at Oregon Center for Contemporary Art 2021–22. The inaugural director of the Master Artistic Research, Royal Academy of Art, The Hague, Cotter has lectured internationally, most recently at Portland State University. She holds a project residency at Stelo Arts and Culture Foundation 2023-24.

Politics of African Anticolonial Archive

Politics of African Anticolonial Archive
Author: Shiera S. el-Malik,Isaac A. Kamola
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2017-03-03
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781783487912

Download Politics of African Anticolonial Archive Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This volume collects an array of essays that reflect on anticolonialism in Africa, connecting the historical period with the anticolonial present through a critical examination of what constitutes the anticolonial archive.