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“Given the current political conditions, these lectures on race,
ethnicity, and nation, delivered by Stuart Hall almost a quarter of
a century ago, may be even more timely today.” —Angela Y. Davis
In this defining statement one of the founding figures of cultural
studies reflects on the divisive, often deadly consequences of our
contemporary politics of race and identity. As he untangles the
power relations that permeate categories of race, ethnicity, and
nationhood, Stuart Hall shows how old hierarchies of human identity
were forcefully broken apart when oppressed groups introduced new
meanings to the representation of difference. Hall challenges us to
find more sustainable ways of living with difference, redefining
nation, race, and identity. “Stuart Hall bracingly confronts the
persistence of race—and its confounding liberal surrogates,
ethnicity and nation…This is a profoundly humane work
that…finds room for hope and change.” —Orlando Patterson
“Stuart Hall’s written words were ardent, discerning,
recondite, and provocative, his spoken voice lyrical, euphonious,
passionate, at times rhapsodic and he changed the way an entire
generation of critics and commentators debated issues of race and
cultural difference.” —Henry Louis Gates, Jr. “Essential
reading for those seeking to understand Hall’s tremendous impact
on scholars, artists, and filmmakers on both sides of the
Atlantic.” —Artforum
In the 1960s, art patrons Dominique and Jean de Menil founded an
image archive showing the ways that people of African descent have
been represented in Western art from the ancient world to modern
times. Highlights from the image archive, accompanied by essays
written by major scholars, appeared in three large-format volumes,
consisting of one or more books, that quickly became collector's
items. A half-century later, Harvard University Press and the Du
Bois Institute are proud to have republished five of the original
books and to present five completely new ones, extending the series
into the twentieth century. The Impact of Africa, the first of two
books on the twentieth century, looks at changes in the Western
perspective on African art and the representation of Africans, and
the paradox of their interpretation as simultaneously "primitive"
and "modern." The essays include topics such as the new medium of
photography, African influences on Picasso and on Josephine Baker's
impression of 1920s Paris, and the influential contribution of
artists from the Caribbean and Latin American diasporas.
Welcome to the Jungle brings a black British perspective to the
critical reading of a wide range of cultural texts, events and
experiences arising from volatile transformations in the politics
of ethnicity, sexuality and "race" during the 1980s. The ten essays
collected here examine new forms of cultural expression in black
film, photography and visual art exerging with a new generation of
black British artists, and interprets this prolific creativity
within a sociological framework that reveals fresh perspectives on
the bewildering complexity of identity and diversity in an era of
postmodernity. Kobena Mercer documents a wealth of insights opened
up by the overlapping of Asian, African and Caribbean cultures that
constitute Black Britain as a unique domain of diaspora.
In the 1960s, art patrons Dominique and Jean de Menil founded an
image archive showing the ways that people of African descent have
been represented in Western art from the ancient world to modern
times. Highlights from the image archive, accompanied by essays
written by major scholars, appeared in three large format volumes,
consisting of one or more books, that quickly became collector s
items. A half century later, Harvard University Press and the Du
Bois Institute are proud to have republished five of the original
books and five completely new ones, extending the series into the
twentieth century.
"The Rise of Black Artists," the second of two books on the
twentieth century and the final volume in The Image of the Black in
Western Art," marks an essential shift in the series and focuses on
representation of blacks by black artists in the West. This volume
takes on important topics ranging from urban migration within the
United States to globalization, to Negritude and cultural
hybridity, to the modern black artist s relationship with European
aesthetic traditions and experimentation with new technologies and
media. Concentrating on the United States, Europe, and the
Caribbean, essays in this volume shed light on topics such as
photography, jazz, the importance of political activism to the
shaping of black identities, as well as the post-black art
world."
This is the first comprehensive monograph devoted to New York and
San Francisco-based artist Renee Green. Over the past 20 years,
through film, video, sound art, photographs, prints, banners,
texts, websites and ephemera, Green's work has comprised complex,
multi-layered archive-like installations, employing a vast array of
sources, which always urge viewers to become active participants.
Included in this superbly illustrated volume are newly commissioned
essays by a host of esteemed media scholars, art historians,
critics and curators--Nora Alter, Diedrich Diederichsen, Kobena
Mercer, Catherine Queloz, Gloria Sutton and Elvan Zabunyan--who
engage issues central to Green's oeuvre, such as genealogy,
archives and their reworkings, movements and displacements, site
specificity and location.
A fresh perspective on the influential critic, offering new ways of
understanding the art of the Harlem Renaissance Alain Locke
(1885-1954), leading theorist of the Harlem Renaissance, maintained
a lifelong commitment to the visual arts. Offering an in-depth
study of Locke's writings and art world interventions, Kobena
Mercer focuses on the importance of cross-cultural entanglement.
This distinctive approach reveals Locke's vision of modern art as a
dynamic space where images and ideas generate new forms under the
fluid conditions of diaspora. Positioning the philosopher as an
advocate for an Afromodern aesthetic that drew from both formal
experiments in Europe and the iconic legacy of the African past,
Mercer shows how Aaron Douglas, Lois Mailou Jones, and other New
Negro artists acknowledged the diaspora's rupture with the
ancestral past as a prelude to the rebirth of identity. In his 1940
picture book, The Negro in Art, Locke also explored the different
ways black and white artists approached the black image. Mercer's
reading highlights the global mobility of black images as they
travel across national and ethnic frontiers. Finally, Mercer
examines how Locke's investment in art was shaped by gay male
aestheticism. Black male nudes, including works by Richmond Barthe
and Carl Van Vechten, thus reveal the significance of queer
practices in modernism's cross-cultural genesis. Published in
association with the Hutchins Center for African & African
American Research, Harvard University
Over the years, Kobena Mercer has critically illuminated the visual
innovations of African American and black British artists. In
Travel & See he presents a diasporic model of criticism that
gives close attention to aesthetic strategies while tracing the
shifting political and cultural contexts in which black visual art
circulates. In eighteen essays, which cover the period from 1992 to
2012 and discuss such leading artists as Isaac Julien, Renee Green,
Kerry James Marshall, and Yinka Shonibare, Mercer provides nothing
less than a counternarrative of global contemporary art that
reveals how the "dialogical principle" of cross-cultural
interaction not only has transformed commonplace perceptions of
blackness today but challenges us to rethink the entangled history
of modernism as well.
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