Corporeal Identities, Maternal Artivism: A New Decolonial Approach to the Study of Latin American Women Artists

Type de ressource
Article de revue
Auteur/contributeur
Titre
Corporeal Identities, Maternal Artivism: A New Decolonial Approach to the Study of Latin American Women Artists
Résumé
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.
Publication
Arts
Volume
8
Numéro
4
Date
2019
Langue
Anglais
Catalogue de bibl.
Référence
Demori, L. (2019). Corporeal Identities, Maternal Artivism: A New Decolonial Approach to the Study of Latin American Women Artists. Arts, 8(4). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.3390/arts8040137
2. Auteur.rice.s et créateur.rice.s
4. Corpus analysé
4. Lieu de production du savoir
5. Pratiques médiatiques