To Send a Kite: Simone Weil’s Lessons in Ethical Attention for the Curator

As socially engaged practices grow within the curatorial field, the use of attention becomes a crucial ethical decision. How and to whom attention is given centers on concerns of visibility, belonging, and the determination of those characteristics within a community’s negotiated communicative space...

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Main Author: Maggie Sava
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Philosophies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2409-9287/5/4/32
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spelling doaj-9b60d870b6d64c948f1598bc6b9528ff2020-11-25T03:34:13ZengMDPI AGPhilosophies2409-92872020-11-0153232010.3390/philosophies5040032To Send a Kite: Simone Weil’s Lessons in Ethical Attention for the CuratorMaggie Sava0Independent Researcher, Denver, CO 80203, USAAs socially engaged practices grow within the curatorial field, the use of attention becomes a crucial ethical decision. How and to whom attention is given centers on concerns of visibility, belonging, and the determination of those characteristics within a community’s negotiated communicative space. Exploring Simone Weil’s ethics of attention through and alongside incarceration-focused curatorial projects, this article positions her writing as a potential framework for attentive curation. The resulting pathways found in Weil’s writing offer means of transforming the curatorial into a self-silencing act of witnessing that serves underrecognized voices. This research parses how Weilian attention redefines inquiry as the process of listening to and incorporating others’ perspectives as primary sources of knowledge. Looking towards an ethics of Weilian attention with examples of incarceration-focused curation reveals how upholding the insights and articulations of marginalized individuals promotes social wellbeing and works towards the realization of justice. Thousand Kites, a prison-based project connecting inmates and the public through the radio and internet, provides the central case study for a curatorial project aligning with Weilian attention.https://www.mdpi.com/2409-9287/5/4/32Simone Weilattentionethicscuratorial ethicscurationincarceration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maggie Sava
spellingShingle Maggie Sava
To Send a Kite: Simone Weil’s Lessons in Ethical Attention for the Curator
Philosophies
Simone Weil
attention
ethics
curatorial ethics
curation
incarceration
author_facet Maggie Sava
author_sort Maggie Sava
title To Send a Kite: Simone Weil’s Lessons in Ethical Attention for the Curator
title_short To Send a Kite: Simone Weil’s Lessons in Ethical Attention for the Curator
title_full To Send a Kite: Simone Weil’s Lessons in Ethical Attention for the Curator
title_fullStr To Send a Kite: Simone Weil’s Lessons in Ethical Attention for the Curator
title_full_unstemmed To Send a Kite: Simone Weil’s Lessons in Ethical Attention for the Curator
title_sort to send a kite: simone weil’s lessons in ethical attention for the curator
publisher MDPI AG
series Philosophies
issn 2409-9287
publishDate 2020-11-01
description As socially engaged practices grow within the curatorial field, the use of attention becomes a crucial ethical decision. How and to whom attention is given centers on concerns of visibility, belonging, and the determination of those characteristics within a community’s negotiated communicative space. Exploring Simone Weil’s ethics of attention through and alongside incarceration-focused curatorial projects, this article positions her writing as a potential framework for attentive curation. The resulting pathways found in Weil’s writing offer means of transforming the curatorial into a self-silencing act of witnessing that serves underrecognized voices. This research parses how Weilian attention redefines inquiry as the process of listening to and incorporating others’ perspectives as primary sources of knowledge. Looking towards an ethics of Weilian attention with examples of incarceration-focused curation reveals how upholding the insights and articulations of marginalized individuals promotes social wellbeing and works towards the realization of justice. Thousand Kites, a prison-based project connecting inmates and the public through the radio and internet, provides the central case study for a curatorial project aligning with Weilian attention.
topic Simone Weil
attention
ethics
curatorial ethics
curation
incarceration
url https://www.mdpi.com/2409-9287/5/4/32
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