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Résultats 265 ressources
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Este libro reúne ensayos de doce teóricos latinoamericanos, quienes hacen una reflexión acerca de la diversidad epistémica en el mundo contemporáneo. Plantean que la decolonialidad en el siglo XXI tendrá que dirigirse a la heterarquía de las múltiples relaciones raciales, étnicas, sexuales, económicas y de género que quedaron intactas durante el siglo XX.
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The proliferation of critical and creative post-porn movements, which vindicate the representation of dissident sexualities under a new feminist, queer and transgender perspective, provide tools of analysis to rethink past literary and audiovisual pornographic productions, as well as to reformulate current ones. In this line of intermediate research, between cinema and literature, an approach to the work of Chilean writer Roberto Bolaño is proposed that will allow us to discern whether he can be considered a post-porn author related to the Golden Age of pornographic cinema in the 1970s and 1980s. Two of his stories and a novel will be studied: “Joanna Silvestri”, from which a gender reading will be made that problematizes the role of women within an eminently heteronormative industry, obsessed with representing male ejaculation; “Prefiguración de Lalo Cura”, analyzed under a postcolonial perspective of appropriation of subaltern bodies conceived as geographical territories, and Una novelita lumpen, in the field of porn pedagogy. The resulting findings make it possible to establish that Roberto Bolaño can indeed be considered a post-porn author by translating the narrative proposals of the Golden Age porn films into his own literary project, with a feminist and post-colonial critical intention.
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Stemming from Grosfoguel’s decolonial discourse, and particularly his enquiry on how to steer away from the alternative between Eurocentric universalism and third world fundamentalism in the production of knowledge, this article aims to respond to this query in relation to the field of the art produced by Latin American women artists in the past four decades. It does so by investigating the decolonial approach advanced by third world feminism (particularly scholar Chandra Talpade Mohanty) and by rescuing it from—what I reckon to be—a methodological impasse. It proposes to resolve such an issue by reclaiming transnational feminism as a way out from what I see as a fundamentalist and essentialist tactic. Following from a theoretically and methodological introduction, this essay analyzes the practice of Cuban-born artist Marta María Pérez Bravo, specifically looking at the photographic series Para Concebir (1985–1986); it proposes a decolonial reading of her work, which merges third world feminism’s nation-based approach with a transnational outlook, hence giving justice to the migration of goods, ideas, and people that Ella Shohat sees as deeply characterizing the contemporary cultural background. Finally, this article claims that Pérez Bravo’s oeuvre offers the visual articulation of a decolonial strategy, concurrently combining global with local concerns.
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As bell hooks points out in “Aesthetic Inheritances: History Worked by Hand,” writing an inclusive art history is no easy task. Until very recently, Aboriginal women have been written out of Canadian art history, or rather art history has been written around us. How do we write ourselves in? It falls far beyond simple insertion; the erasures are far too deep. Insertion presumes a simple forgetfulness, an oversight, a neglecting of the obvious. Insertion assumes a presence. It implies a shared mode of history, a common belonging to a collective archive, and an agreed-upon understanding of what it means to be an artist. Beyond the important considerations of race, gender, culture, and social class, our distinct legal status in Canada must be acknowledged. This was particularly true for women artists working between 1880 and 1970. For much of the time period under consideration, First Nations communities lived under a profoundly restrictive regime of colonial power. Relationships between First Nations people and the Canadian state have been defined by the Indian Act, a piece of legislation enacted in 1876 and surviving, through many amendments and revisions, until the present time.
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The culmination of three seminars at SAR's Indian Arts Research Center (IARC) that brought together Native women artists to discuss the balancing of their art practice with the myriad roles, responsibilities, and commitments they have. The artworks were diverse in media and content and are featured in the plates section of this volume, along with the artist statements that accompanied the pieces in the exhibit. The chapters reflect some of the seminars emerging themes: gender, home/crossing, and art as healing/art as struggle
Explorer
1. Approches
- Genre et sexualité
- Analyses formalistes (13)
- Approches sociologiques (121)
- Épistémologies autochtones (35)
- Étude de la réception (24)
- Étude des industries culturelles (60)
- Étude des représentations (132)
- Histoire/historiographie critique (48)
- Humanités numériques (14)
- Méthodologie de recherche décoloniale (12)
2. Auteur.rice.s et créateur.rice.s
- Auteur.rice (25)
- Auteur.rice autochtone (15)
- Auteur.rice LGBTQ+ (15)
- Auteur.rice noir.e (41)
- Auteur.rice PANDC (98)
- Autrice (101)
- Créateur.rice autochtone (32)
- Créateur.rice LGBTQ+ (37)
- Créateur.rice noir.e (25)
- Créateur.rice PANDC (24)
- Créatrice (48)
- Identités diasporiques (24)
4. Corpus analysé
- Afrique (11)
- Amérique centrale (15)
- Amérique du Nord (133)
- Amérique du Sud (35)
- Asie (55)
- Europe (30)
- Océanie (1)
4. Lieu de production du savoir
- Afrique (3)
- Amérique centrale (3)
- Amérique du Nord (181)
- Amérique du Sud (23)
- Asie (27)
- Europe (36)
- Océanie (8)