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from http://www.blackportraitures.info |
Archives and Artificial Histories:
Remix in African American Literature
Black Portraiture{s} III: Reinventions: Strains of Histories and Cultures. Tribune Hall. Johannesburg, South Africa. 17 - 19 November 2016.
Black Portraiture{s} III: Reinventions: Strains of Histories and Cultures. Tribune Hall. Johannesburg, South Africa. 17 - 19 November 2016.
My experimental novel Willows in the Spring is a bildungsroman story that explores the relationships women share in
the delicate gestational period of adolescence. It fictionalizes the
oppressions and opportunities that emerged as a result of the Women’s Suffrage
Movement in the United States. The Great Depression, coupled with the eugenic
optimism of the 1930s, created many tensions within the Movement. The novel
re-appropriates archival documents as narrative artifacts.
The novel’s protagonist is a fourteen-year-old girl who
is being rehabilitated for promiscuity at the Girls Industrial School of Kansas during the late
1930s. The protagonist, Katherine Perish, affectionately known as Kat, is the
daughter of a Lutheran minister and pious mother. Her mother is a prominent
member of the Women’s Christian Temperance Union.
The novel addresses the relationships women share across
race barriers and generations. With an emphasis on sexuality and reproductive
rights, the story charts the processes of self-discovery within a community of
young women at the Girls Industrial School of Kansas. The story is
further complicated by the political, religious, racial, and environmental
climates of Kansas. Inspired by the glorious achievements of
women in Kansas’ history, Willows in the Spring is a third-wave feminist
ensemble that resonates the harmonies of the jazz era.
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from https://www.amazon.com/Re-Bop-Remixes-Various-Artists/dp/B000F4RHA2 |
Afro-modernist
legacy – Afro-Postmodern Tendencies
Explorations
of ethnicity and modernism complement one another. As a contemporary work of
fiction, my novel Willows of the Spring resembles an Afro-modernist aesthetic. Mark Sanders refers to
Afro-modernism as a “claim of historicity, of change, development…of both
social and psychic complexity.”
The novel is in kind an expression of Re-Bop, an art form that
incorporates the artistic practice of DJing and relies heavily on previous
notions of Afro-modernism expressed in jazz theory and practice. These
reflections on DJing inspired me to consider what aspects of my work are post-modern.
Much of what I am doing in this presentation is questioning if my work stands in the crossroads of literary (in the form of linguistic text and genre manipulation), visual (archival photos), cultural (abstracting/recontextualizing the historical narratives) and other forms of Afrologic and expression.
Much of what I am doing in this presentation is questioning if my work stands in the crossroads of literary (in the form of linguistic text and genre manipulation), visual (archival photos), cultural (abstracting/recontextualizing the historical narratives) and other forms of Afrologic and expression.
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from |
Adam Banks finds a remix to be ‘a remake undertaken to fit a different context, purpose, and audience… He also finds that a remix may use different samples, slightly or significantly, different melodies or beats, additional or removed voices, and layerings of all the above.The recontextualization of digital archives are one of the ways I demonstrate creative mobility and engages in a type
of remix that is a “multidimensional performance” and an “intentional rehearsal
of a history.”
Jesse Stewart in "DJ Spooky and the Politics of Afro-Postmodernism" (2010) finds that the multiplicity and fluidity of DJ culture plays out on a global scale, because we are in the age of digital file transfers and a virtually limitless digital archive. The recontextualizing of digitally material is one of the ways stake "claim to history".
He also finds that Afro-postmodernism frequently uses pastiche, intertextuality, and irony as strategies of identity formation the remember and honor the cultural past, while at the same time working to construct visions of a better future. Likewise, the Afro-postmodernist emphasis on creative mobility and the collapsing of artistic, cultural, social, and economic boundaries is frequently connected to ideals of race advancement and social justice more generally.
Jesse Stewart in "DJ Spooky and the Politics of Afro-Postmodernism" (2010) finds that the multiplicity and fluidity of DJ culture plays out on a global scale, because we are in the age of digital file transfers and a virtually limitless digital archive. The recontextualizing of digitally material is one of the ways stake "claim to history".
He also finds that Afro-postmodernism frequently uses pastiche, intertextuality, and irony as strategies of identity formation the remember and honor the cultural past, while at the same time working to construct visions of a better future. Likewise, the Afro-postmodernist emphasis on creative mobility and the collapsing of artistic, cultural, social, and economic boundaries is frequently connected to ideals of race advancement and social justice more generally.
I have chosen to write my novel like this because I am aware of the power of archival
photos also act as a type of visual ethnography/biography, some westernized logic and "proof". The reclaiming of
archival photos allows me to undermine photography’s use as proof.
Deborah Willis says that art that reclaims
archival proof is a way to “wrestle the
black body from the grip of visual empiricism – where it has often been used by
more powerful others observing it for evidence of deviance and difference”…
Whereby this remix is a means of “intentionally going against the grain of current historicist discourse.”
This novel works like some of DJ Spooky’s
recordings. It combines Afrological and Eurological elements to create a
polyculutral, Afro-postmodern flow of LITERATURE [music] that challenges the ontological
status of both jazz and hip hop as stable entities unto themselves.
My interest in portraits and archival photos into literary works demonstrates the influence of Lucille Clifton on my writing.
Her memoir Generations (1976) is
composed of family photos and short prose writings. Clifton arranged
collections of short prose writings to express diverse perspectives and to
create individual portraits that are echoed by the photographs. This method allowed Clifton to tell her life
story in a relational format, within the context of her family and public
histories. In doing so, she was able to portray African Americans outside of the constraints of visual empiricism.
In this novel I am re-bopping and extending the tradition of intertextual
works in African American Literature. I am looking to works such as Langston
Hughes and Roy Decavara’s The Sweet Fly
Paper of Life (1955), Natasha Trethewey’s Belloqc’s Ophelia (2002) and most specifically Lucille Clifton’s Generations (1976) as models.
Artist’s Statement
As a
writer, I engage in cultural productions; I create distinct archives. Most
often my observations are expressed in surrealist forms that are reflect some
concepts associated with psychoanalytic theory and memory studies, particularly
Toni Morrison’s theories regarding rememory.
I am inspired by the anxieties of our contemporary existence. These anxieties are further complicated by fears that some linear narratives of history fail to be inclusive. Essentially, I belong to a generation, and speak primarily for black women artists when I say, “we do not fear death, but are afraid that we may be erased"-yet again.
As an Assistant Professor at the University of Kentucky, I contribute to the academic mission of five areas of study – creative writing, American literature and cultural studies, African American and Africana Studies, digital humanities/WIRED learning, and women’s and gender studies. My research stands in the intersections of these disciplinary studies.
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