Phenomenal Bodies: The Metaphysical Possibilities of Post-Black Film and Visual Culture

In recent years, film, art, new media, and music video works created by black makers have demonstrated an increasingly “post-black” impulse. The term “post-black” was originally coined in response to innovative practices and works created by a generation of black artists who were shaped by hip-hop c...

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Main Author: Beverly, Michele P.
Format: Others
Published: Digital Archive @ GSU 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/communication_diss/37
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1037&context=communication_diss
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spelling ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-digitalarchive.gsu.edu-communication_diss-10372013-04-23T03:26:18Z Phenomenal Bodies: The Metaphysical Possibilities of Post-Black Film and Visual Culture Beverly, Michele P. In recent years, film, art, new media, and music video works created by black makers have demonstrated an increasingly “post-black” impulse. The term “post-black” was originally coined in response to innovative practices and works created by a generation of black artists who were shaped by hip-hop culture and Afro-modernist thinking. I use the term as a theoretical tool to discuss what lies beyond the racial character of a work, image, or body. Using a post-black theoretical methodology I examine a range of works by black filmmakers Kathleen Collins Prettyman and Lee Daniels, visual artists Wangechi Mutu and Jean-Michel Basquiat, new media artist Nettrice Gaskins, and music video works of hip-hop artists and performer Erykah Badu. I discuss how black artists and filmmakers have moved through Darby English’s notion of “black representational space” as a sphere where bodies and works are beholden to specific historical and aesthetic expectations and limitations. I posit that black representational space has been challenged by what I describe as “metaphysical space” where bodies produce a new set of possibilities as procreative, fluid, liberated, and otherworldly forces. These bodies are neither positive nor negative; instead they occupy the in-between spaces between life and death, time and space, digital and analog, interiority and exteriority, vulnerability and empowerment. Post-black visual culture displays the capacities of black bodies as creative forces that shape how we see and experience visual culture. My methodology employs textual analysis of visual objects that articulate a post-black impulse, paying close attention to how these works compel viewers to see other dimensions of experience. In three chapters I draw from theoretical work in race and visuality, affect theory, phenomenology, and interiority from the likes of Charles Johnson, Frantz Fanon, Elena del Río, Sara Ahmed, Saidiya Hartman, and Elizabeth Alexander. This study aims to create an interdisciplinary analysis that charts new directions for exploring and re-imaging black bodies as subjects and objects of endless knowledge and creative potential. 2012-12-07 text application/pdf http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/communication_diss/37 http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1037&context=communication_diss Communication Dissertations Digital Archive @ GSU Black film Hip-hop African American culture African American film African American cinema Race and visual culture
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Black film
Hip-hop
African American culture
African American film
African American cinema
Race and visual culture
spellingShingle Black film
Hip-hop
African American culture
African American film
African American cinema
Race and visual culture
Beverly, Michele P.
Phenomenal Bodies: The Metaphysical Possibilities of Post-Black Film and Visual Culture
description In recent years, film, art, new media, and music video works created by black makers have demonstrated an increasingly “post-black” impulse. The term “post-black” was originally coined in response to innovative practices and works created by a generation of black artists who were shaped by hip-hop culture and Afro-modernist thinking. I use the term as a theoretical tool to discuss what lies beyond the racial character of a work, image, or body. Using a post-black theoretical methodology I examine a range of works by black filmmakers Kathleen Collins Prettyman and Lee Daniels, visual artists Wangechi Mutu and Jean-Michel Basquiat, new media artist Nettrice Gaskins, and music video works of hip-hop artists and performer Erykah Badu. I discuss how black artists and filmmakers have moved through Darby English’s notion of “black representational space” as a sphere where bodies and works are beholden to specific historical and aesthetic expectations and limitations. I posit that black representational space has been challenged by what I describe as “metaphysical space” where bodies produce a new set of possibilities as procreative, fluid, liberated, and otherworldly forces. These bodies are neither positive nor negative; instead they occupy the in-between spaces between life and death, time and space, digital and analog, interiority and exteriority, vulnerability and empowerment. Post-black visual culture displays the capacities of black bodies as creative forces that shape how we see and experience visual culture. My methodology employs textual analysis of visual objects that articulate a post-black impulse, paying close attention to how these works compel viewers to see other dimensions of experience. In three chapters I draw from theoretical work in race and visuality, affect theory, phenomenology, and interiority from the likes of Charles Johnson, Frantz Fanon, Elena del Río, Sara Ahmed, Saidiya Hartman, and Elizabeth Alexander. This study aims to create an interdisciplinary analysis that charts new directions for exploring and re-imaging black bodies as subjects and objects of endless knowledge and creative potential.
author Beverly, Michele P.
author_facet Beverly, Michele P.
author_sort Beverly, Michele P.
title Phenomenal Bodies: The Metaphysical Possibilities of Post-Black Film and Visual Culture
title_short Phenomenal Bodies: The Metaphysical Possibilities of Post-Black Film and Visual Culture
title_full Phenomenal Bodies: The Metaphysical Possibilities of Post-Black Film and Visual Culture
title_fullStr Phenomenal Bodies: The Metaphysical Possibilities of Post-Black Film and Visual Culture
title_full_unstemmed Phenomenal Bodies: The Metaphysical Possibilities of Post-Black Film and Visual Culture
title_sort phenomenal bodies: the metaphysical possibilities of post-black film and visual culture
publisher Digital Archive @ GSU
publishDate 2012
url http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/communication_diss/37
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1037&context=communication_diss
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