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Nida Alahmad

CRITIQUE Lecture Healthcare as a Site of Citizen-Subjectivity: Vulnerability, Resistance, Awakening with Sara Rushing (Montana State), 12 May 2021, 4 pm

This CRITIQUE LECTURE will draw on Sara Rushing’s recent book, The Virtues of Vulnerability, to discuss how what she calls “citizen-subjectivity” can be produced within contexts of bodily vulnerability, particularly within mainstream healthcare in the United States, or within what Foucault called “the clinic.” Under relational and collaborative conditions defined […]

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CRITIQUE Virtual Author-Meets-Critics (Co-sponsored with RaceED) on Dreamworlds of Race, with Duncan Bell (Cambridge) – 28 April 2021, 3 pm

A Virtual Author Meets Critics with Professor Duncan Bell, Cambridge University. Co-sponsored with RaceED. Between the late nineteenth century and the First World War an ocean-spanning network of prominent individuals advocated the unification of Britain and the United States. They dreamt of the final consolidation of the Angloworld. Scholars, journalists, […]

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CRITIQUE Lecture Find Our Mothers: Chantal Akerman’s Camerawork as Motherwork, with Lori Marso (Union College) – 14 April 2021, 3 pm

In Jeanne Dielman (1975), From the Other Side (2002) and No Home Movie (2015), Belgian/French filmmaker Chantal Akerman’s camera does motherwork by creating spaces where characters and spectators encounter, hold, and work through discomforting feelings, events, and fantasies.  Informed by black feminist thinking on motherwork and fabulation, I explore how Akerman’s films acknowledge harmful fantasies and norms that structure the way we identify mothers, while also creating cinematic spaces where new practices of mothering and motherwork can be experienced and imagined.  Reading Akerman’s […]

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