Curating Life, Staging Art: Modernisms and the Art Practices of Television

Type de ressource
Chapitre de livre
Auteurs/contributeurs
Titre
Curating Life, Staging Art: Modernisms and the Art Practices of Television
Résumé
Television is predisposed to the perception that it is the opposite of art and politics and that it is a time-consuming means for “dumbing down,” placating, disempowering and benumbing the citizenry. Through a discussion of the place of art and that of television, I use, as a conceptual framework, the convergence of the white cube and the black box to interrogate dynamics of postcoloniality, vision and power and how this forged divergent modernisms. Television in Africa did not, as with postwar America, create a sense of collective communities of spectatorship that would be brought closer to art appreciation through television. Rather, television, as the political, social and cultural phenomenon of modernization in various African countries, seemed to corrupt what was regarded as “pristine” cultural practices. However, since it coincided with colonial independence and the emergence of postcolonial nations, it became intertwined with various modes and mediums through which new forms of social consciousness aimed at self-definition and self-representation could be disseminated. The convergence of the white cube spaces of art and the black box of television enables an engagement with the colonial spatio-temporal distanciation of Africa from the global stage.
Titre du livre
The Routledge Companion to Global Television
Lieu
New York
Maison d’édition
Routledge
Date
14 novembre 2019
Pages
332-345
Langue
Anglais
ISBN
978-1-315-19246-8
Titre abrégé
Curating Life, Staging Art
Extra
Num Pages: 14
Référence
Makhubu, N. (2019). Curating Life, Staging Art: Modernisms and the Art Practices of Television. Dans The Routledge Companion to Global Television (p. 332‑345). Routledge. https://worldcat.org/en/title/1105739533
2. Auteur.rice.s et créateur.rice.s
4. Corpus analysé
4. Lieu de production du savoir
5. Pratiques médiatiques