<div dir="ltr">Thanks all for this very interesting conversation. Ken I am especially intrigued about the comparison between our cases, and the way petroleum, and blackness are both used as part of a collective identity formation. I would enjoy reading anything further you’ve written on this. The snippet you outline here aligns very much with some of the things I’ve been working on, even the use of a lawsuit around the concept of blackness.<br><br>I want to highlight one more point that came up in Alessandra’s post and connects to earlier discussions, that of the sensory. The sensory experience plays a role in both the aesthetic and material realms that come into play. The sensory is a material experience, and an embodied experience, but never cultural neutral (nor perhaps political neutral) and therefore becomes the site of production of collective identities, or a site of domination. In Ken’s example, the process of creating “demographically black” communities involved a very material regulation of bodies, which is accompanied by a number of sensory experiences as well, not least of which are the health affects of the petroleum. I like how Ken explains that blackness “flows through a body at biological risk … and helps form a continuity of political experience.” I think this is key to the sites that have been explored this week – sites in which physical bodies, materialism, and the political are deeply entwined, and blackness “flows” and ebbs between and among them into different configurations. This set of conversations also affirms what Alessandra has been discussing in exploring the concept of “liquid blackness.” I think what this term offers, over other terms used to explore race, such as the “floating signifier,” is that it does not rely on the discursive alone but interrogates multiple realms including the physical, material, and sensory.<br><br>Sarah<div class="gmail_extra"><br>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature"><div dir="ltr"><div><div dir="ltr">Ph.D. Candidate<br>Institute of the Liberal Arts<br>Emory University<br>Atlanta, GA</div></div></div></div>
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