Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin - Zentrum für Transdisziplinäre Geschlechterstudien

Digital Conference

Digital Conference: Thursday March 18, 2021 (9 am to 4 pm EDT / 14.00 to 21.00 CET) (via Zoom, registration link below)

Re-Mapping Memory: Possibilities of Postcolonial and Anti-Racist (Counter)Archiving

 

Poster Re-Mapping Memory

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

download a flyer with full schedule and details
(Poster Design: Thao Ho)

 

download the program booklet

 

In light of the recent anti-racist protests in reaction to continued police violence in the United States and across the globe, the Princeton-HU Strategic Partnership Research Project Re‑Imagining the Archive: Sexual Politics and Postcolonial Entanglements is hosting a one-day digital conference on Thursday, March 18th, 2021, to discuss the current challenges of memorial cultures and politics. The simultaneous critique of racism, sexism, and transphobia in different places across the globe in 2020 marked a specific moment in time that we take as a prompt to further the conversation on anti-racist and postcolonial memorial and archival practices and methodologies. How and where do we encounter the legacies of enslavement and colonialism in our everyday lives, in our research and our institutions’ histories? What strategies can we find to publicly address and counter these histories of violence? This includes the renaming of streets and the removal of statues but also the creation of new sites of commemoration. Keynote speaker Anjali Arondekar and panelists will address the following questions: How can transdisciplinary gender and postcolonial studies, combining historiographic, literary, and anthropological perspectives, not only challenge existing archives, but also re-imagine methodologies of archiving? How do the body, feeling and aspiration act as archives and how can we approach the archive itself as a processual hub of relationships and struggles? In other words, which archival hermeneutics are required to tell marginalized gendered (hi)stories, including fictional and speculative re-imaginations as alternative forms of (counter)archives, and envision possible queer antiracist/antisexist futures?

 

Program

ET / CET

09.00-10.30 / 14.00-15.30    

 

Panel 1: Archival Affordances and Political Struggles

Chair: Mari Jarris

 

Anne Potjans: Transnational Attachments: The Emotional Politics of the #BlackLivesMatter Movement

 

RL Goldberg: Wrongly Bodied, Too: Clarissa Sligh’s Black/Trans Archive

 

Tara Suri: Between the Body and the Population: The Soviet Vacuum Aspirator and the Politics of Abortion in Postcolonial India (1952-1971)

 

10.30-10.45 / 15.30-15.45

Break

 

10.45-12.15 / 15.45-17.15  

Roundtable Discussion: Possibilities of Postcolonial and Anti-Racist (Counter)Archiving in the Present Moment

Chair: Wallace D. Best

 

Panelists: Natalie Bayer, Anja Sunhyun Michaelsen, Silvy Chakkalakal and Elahe Haschemi Yekani

 

12.15 -12.45 / 17.15-17.45  

Break

 

12.45-13.35 / 17.45-18.35  

Panel 2: The Body as Archive

Chair: Todd Sekuler

 

Sina Holst: The Body as Time Machine: Trauma Theory, Time and the Body

 

Jiya Pandya: Living Through History: Reproductive Disability in a Scientific Archive of the Bhopal Gas Tragedy 

 

13.35-14.00 / 18.35-19.00  

Break

 

14.00-15.30 / 19.00-20.30      

Keynote

Anjali Arondekar: Abundance: Sexuality’s Archives

 

Introduction: Silvy Chakkalakal

Anjali Arondekar (Associate Professor of Feminist Studies, and founding Co-Director, Center for South Asian Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz)

Abundance: Sexuality’s Archives

Histories of sexuality routinely mediate past(s) through archival forms of paucity, disenfranchisement and loss. Sexuality, particularly in the global south, is rescued from the detritus of hegemonic histories of colonialism and nationalism and placed within more reparative narratives of reform and rights. This talk challenges such a focus on loss as the structuring mode of narration for histories of sexuality. Instead, I explore the radical abundance of sexuality through archives in South Asia that are plentiful and quotidian, imaginative and ordinary. Two central questions are at stake here: (1) What if we are to shift our attention from the recuperation of sexuality as loss to understanding it as a site of radical abundance and futurity? (2) What are the archival and/or evidentiary forms that emerge from such a coupling of sexuality and abundance?

 

This digital seminar will take place via zoom.
 

Registration closed.
 
Conference links:

http://gss.princeton.edu/