[-empyre-] Welcome to week 4 of February 2020 discussion: Politicizing space and time
Dale Hudson
dmh2018 at nyu.edu
Sun Feb 23 20:13:19 AEDT 2020
Thanks, Afrah and Sama, for nudging us to think about feminist interventions.
I’ve invited Joumana Al Jabri, Surabhi Shamra, and Parisa Vaziri to ways that space and time can be politicized through arts practice and scholarship.
I’m seeing the week’s welcome prompt a little easier since I am in transit today, but please feel free to respond to any of the previous weeks’ prompts.
Best from Beirut,
Dale
4—Politicizing space and time
Whether physical or virtual, space is a location of where rights can be enacted by communities when they are denied by states or social actors. Occupying spaces can serve as a mode of representation that moves from visual and auditory presence to political agency. Comparably, time has been a means of marginalizing or discrediting communities as “backwards” or somehow outside modernities.
This week considers communities that have been marginalized and otherwise disempowered by being erased or silenced in national or international representations of space and time. It asks questions about claiming visibility by stateless nations visible, claiming audibility by minoritized ethnicities, and claiming a place in histories.
Rather than discrediting such challenges to dominant powers as unruly. or uncivil, this week asks us to think about how minoritized and migrant groups navigate the intersections of race, gender, class, religion, and nation. It also asks which groups prefer to speak to outsiders and which prefer to keep conversations within the community.
GUEST BIOS
Joumana al Jabri’s work revolves around creative processes and outputs to address pressing social issues. She is a co-founder along with Ramzi Jaber and Ahmad Ghunaim of Visualizing Impact, winner of Prix Ars Electronica 2013, partnered with Polypod. Joumana co-curated TEDxRamallah 2011 with Ramzi, organized between Ramallah-Bethlehem, Beirut and Amman and livestreamed to over twenty cities globally. She is a co-founder along with Reem Charif and Mohamad Hafeda of Febrik a collaborative platform for participatory art and design research projects concerned with social practices in public spaces, with particular focus on Palestinian refugee camps.
Surabhi Shamra has been an independent filmmaker making feature-length documentaries and short films since 2000. Her documentaries, fiction, and video installations engage with cities in transition using the lens of labor, music, and migration. Her films have been screened and awarded at international film festivals and include: Returning to the First Beat (2017); Bidesia in Bambai (2013); Jahaji Music: India in the Caribbean (2007); Above the Din of Sewing Machines (2004); Aamakaar, The Turtle People (2002); and Jari Mari: Of Cloth and Other Stories (2001). She is an assistant professor at New York University Abu Dhabi.
Parisa Vaziri received her Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from U.C. Irvine in 2018. Her work engages legacies of Indian Ocean world slavery in the long durée through prisms of visual media. Her research overlaps interests in critical theory, black studies, Middle Eastern cultural production, postcolonial critiques of history, film theory, new media, philosophy, anthropology, and histories of displinary formation more generally. Her current project recovers articulations of blackness in Iranian visual culture, primarily through the media of experimental documentary and art cinema. She proposes film as a site of transmission that disrupts traditional periodization schemes and that elucidates problems of temporality and geography in orthdox narratives about the concept of race. Two of her forthcoming publications position the history of experimental ethnographic documentary as supplement and stimulant to the Iranian New Wave film movement, while exploring how filmic blackness allegorizes modernity's spatial and temporal disjunctions.
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