This book examines necropolitics and performance art, with a particular focus on the black body and the African diaspora.
In this book, Myron M. Beasley situates artists as cultural workers and theorists who illuminate the political linkages between their own and others’ specific locales. The focus is an interrogation of the political systems that dictate and determine the value of lives (and decide which lives matter) through a lens of performance and art. Beasley highlights how the performances of rupture, which are of artistic, and historical significance, reveal both strategies of survival and promises of possibility. Artists and curators examined include Jelili Atiku, Giscard Bouchotte, Nona Faustine, Vanessa German, Simone Leigh, Nathalie Anguezomo Mba Bikoro, Ebony G. Patterson, and Dianne Smith.
The volume is an ideal research and reference book for students and scholars of Contemporary Art, African Studies, and Performance Theory.
Author(s): Myron M. Beasley
Series: Routledge Focus on Art History and Visual Studies
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2023
Language: English
Pages: 120
City: New York
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Foreword
1 Performance, Death, Politics
2 Haiti is Open for Dreaming/Haiti is Open for Business: Curating Périféeriques Against Precarity
3 9 of 219/A Carnival of Caskets
4 Public Mourning/Performance as Life
5 Geographies of Death Wearing White Shoes
6 On Rituals of Death
7 Harlem/Waste, Death, and Newly Assigned Value
8 The Anti-Museum
Afterword
Index