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This book is a study of the lived experience of African men in
Australia and New Zealand. The author employs a relational account
of racism which foregrounds how the colonial shaped the
contemporary, with the settler states of contemporary Australia and
New Zealand having been moulded by their colonial histories.
Uncommodified Blackness examines the changing racial conditions in
Australia and New Zealand, inspired by the view that as racial
conditions change globally, prevailing racial modalities in these
two countries must be reexamined and theory must be developed or
revised as appropriate. Students and scholars across a range of
social science disciplines will find this book of interest,
particularly those with an interest in refugees, immigration, race
and masculinity.
Volume 4 of Visual Century: South African Art in Context 1907-1948
is part of a four-volume publication that reappraises South African
visual art of the twentieth century from a postapartheid
perspective. The years 1990 to 2007 are covered in Volume 4, edited
by Thembinkosi Goniwe, Mario Pissarra and Mandisi Majavu. The end
of the Cold War and subsequent emergence of globalisation, along
with the advent of democracy in South Africa introduced new social
and political orders, with profound implications for South African
artists. Concurrently, the persistence of economic inequalities and
conflicts within and beyond national borders constantly mitigated
against an unbridled celebration of `freedom'. The essays in this
volume critically address some of the most notable developments and
visible trends in postapartheid South African art. These include
South Africa's entry into the international art community, its
struggle to address its past, and artists' persistent and often
provocative preoccupations with individual and collective identity.
The widespread and often unsettling representation of human bodies,
as well as animal forms, along with the steady increase in use of
new technologies and the development of new forms of public art are
also discussed. While much of the art of the period is open-ended
and non-didactic, the persistence of engagement with socially
responsive themes calls into question the reductive binary between
`resistance' and post-apartheid art that has come to dominate
accounts of `before' and `after'.
This book is a study of the lived experience of African men in
Australia and New Zealand. The author employs a relational account
of racism which foregrounds how the colonial shaped the
contemporary, with the settler states of contemporary Australia and
New Zealand having been moulded by their colonial histories.
Uncommodified Blackness examines the changing racial conditions in
Australia and New Zealand, inspired by the view that as racial
conditions change globally, prevailing racial modalities in these
two countries must be reexamined and theory must be developed or
revised as appropriate. Students and scholars across a range of
social science disciplines will find this book of interest,
particularly those with an interest in refugees, immigration, race
and masculinity.
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