"Keep Runnin' Bro": Carrie Mae Weems and the Visual Act of Refusal

This essay considers our contemporary era of antiblack racial terror as well as the visual culture that has not only mourned the loss of black life (in this moment) but has also responded to our continual state of emergency. By visual culture, I mean to include, echoing Amelia Jones, everything from...

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Transition. - Indiana University Press, 1957. - 9(2018), 2, Seite 82-109
Format: Online-Aufsatz
Veröffentlicht: 2018
Zugriff auf das übergeordnete Werk:Transition
Schlagworte:Behavioral sciences Applied sciences Law Political science
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:This essay considers our contemporary era of antiblack racial terror as well as the visual culture that has not only mourned the loss of black life (in this moment) but has also responded to our continual state of emergency. By visual culture, I mean to include, echoing Amelia Jones, everything from painting to photography, installation projects, video and film works, performances, and hybrid practices (i.e., mix of performance, photography, and video).1 I argue that even in the face of premature death, black people continue to resist and refuse the silencing of their voice and the threat of state-sanctioned violence.2 From visual and performance artists, amateur and documentary photographers, youth organizers and activists, painters and sculptors, and singers and musicians, we continue to learn what it means to refuse what visual and conceptual artists Carrie Mae Weems calls "the multifaceted arm of the State."3 Indeed, Weems, the artist that I focus on in this essay, has visually and performatively refused the violent subjection of black life by placing sustained attention on how, as Huey Copeland reminds us, "race differently inflects every subject's sense of mortality."4
ISSN:15278042