“Memories of Things to Come: Anthony Joseph and a Futuristic Caribbean Aesthetic”
by Kelly Baker Josephs
5 November 2014
4:30pm-6:00pm
Lucy Stone Hall, Room A266
Livingston Campus
Rutgers University
Art Museum of the Americas
201 18th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20006
Exhibition on view: October 16, 2014- February 1, 2015
Image copied from email announcement.
Inaugural Conference for the Center for the Study of the Greater Caribbean
Columbia University
October 17, 2014
1pm-7:30pm
Hosted by the Institute of Latin American Studies, Columbia University
Conference Location: James Room, 4th Floor, Barnard Hall, 3009 Broadway at W. 117 St. NYC
RSVP to [email protected]
Program Schedule
1:00 PM Welcoming Remarks, John H. Coatsworth, Provost, Columbia University
1:10 PM The Greater Caribbean as a Geo-Historical and Cultural Region
Introduction: José Moya, Barnard College; Director, ILAS, Columbia University
1:30-3:00 PM Writing about the Caribbean from National Perspectives
Patricia Lara, Colombian author and journalist
Boris Muñoz, Venezuelan author and journalist
Jon Lee Anderson, Author and staff writer, The New Yorker
Moderator: Carlos Alonso, Latin American and Iberian Cultures and Dean of the Graduate
School of Arts and Sciences, Columbia University
3:00-3:10 PM Coffee Break
3:10-4:40 PM Writing in the Caribbean Diaspora
Orlando Luis Pardo Lazo, Cuban writer and artist, Brown University
Gina Athena Ulysse, Haitian-American author and anthropologist, Wesleyan University
Caryl Phillips, Kittitian-British novelist, Yale University
Moderators: Kaiama L. Glover and Maja Horn, Barnard College
4:40-4:50 PM Coffee Break
4:50-6:10 PM Photographing the City in the Greater Caribbean: Havana, Caracas, San Juan
Ana Maria Dopico, Comparative Literature and Spanish and Portuguese, NYU
Carlos Brillembourg, Architect, Carlos Brillembourg Architects, NYC
Jorge Lizardi Pollock, Architect and Professor, Universidad de Puerto Rico
Moderator: Frances Negrón-Muntaner, Center for the Study of Ethnicity and Race, Columbia
University
6:10-6:30 PM Coffee Break
6:30-7:20 PM Rhythms of the Greater Caribbean Concert
With master guitarist Aquiles Baez and an international cast of fellow musicians
Radical Archival Practices and the Digital Humanities: The Early Caribbean Digital Archive
Presenter: Elizabeth Maddock Dillon
Thursday, Sept. 4, 4-6 p.m.
CUNY Graduate Center, Room 5318
365 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY
The promise of the digital archive is one of infinite access and endless accumulation—a democratization of knowledge. But the shape of the archive has always been determined by relations of power. Foucault, for instance, defines the archive as the site of the “law of what can be said, the system that governs the appearance of statements as unique events.” Do the new affordances of digitization change or merely reinforce existing divisions between speakable and the unspeakable pasts and futures? This paper turns to the newly-founded Early Caribbean Digital Archive project (a digital collection of pre-1900 texts and images from the Caribbean) to consider how the silences of the archive might be addressed and redressed—not simply by way of accumulation, but by way of strategies of digital remix and curation, aimed at changing the structures of knowledge that have rendered the history of the Black Atlantic and the Caribbean a “deep crypt,” (in the words of Simon Gikandi) in which the voices of the enslaved have been silenced and immured within the archive of early capitalist modernity.
Elizabeth Maddock Dillon is Professor of English at Northeastern University and a Visiting Distinguished Fellow at the Advanced Research Collaborative, CUNY Graduate Center. She is the author of New World Drama: The Performative Commons in the Atlantic World (Duke UP: 2014)
Announcement adapted from email announcement from the CUNY REVAMSTUDIES-L list
Linton Kwesi Johnson will be in residence at NYU’s Institute of African American Affairs this Fall. There will be four programs surrounding his residency,one a lecture by Johnson and the remaining three conversations with other Caribbean artists. The dates and descriptions from the NYU-IAAA’s website are below.
Programs will be introduced by Dr. Ifeona Fulani, Global Liberal Studies Program, New York University
Space is limited. Programs are free and open to the public. Please RSVP at (212) 998 – IAAA (4222)
THE PROGRAMS
Friday, September 19, 2014 / 7:30 pm
PROGRAM: Linton Kwesi Johnson main lecture “African Consciousness in Reggae Music.”
LOCATION: Kimmel Center-NYU, 60 Washington Square South, Rosenthal Pavilion, 10th Floor, NY, NY
Tuesday, September 23, 2014 / 7:00 pm
PROGRAM: An evening of poetry with Linton Kwesi Johnson followed by discussion chaired by British Caribbean novelist and essayist, Caryl Phillips, Professor of English at Yale University.
LOCATION: Kimmel Center-NYU, 60 Washington Square South, E&L Auditorium, 4th Floor, NY, NY
Friday, September 26, 2014 / 6:00 pm
PROGRAM: Mervyn Morris, Jamaica’s poet laureate, talk on Louise Bennett, the mother of Jamaican language poetry followed by discussion chaired by Linton Kwesi Johnson.
LOCATION: D’Agostino Hall, NYU Law School, 108 West Third Street, Room: Lipton Hall, NY, NY
Friday, October 10, 2014 / 6:00 pm
PROGRAM: An evening of Caribbean poetry with Kwame Dawes (Jamaica/Ghana), Lauren Alleyne (Trinidad) and Vladimir Lucien (St. Lucia) and Olive Senior (Jamaica) reading from their works chaired by Kwame Dawes.
LOCATION: D’Agostino Hall, NYU Law School, 108 West Third Street, Room: Lipton Hall. NY, NY
ABOUT LINTON KWESI JOHNSON
Linton Kwesi Johnson was born in Chapleton, in the parish of Clarendon, Jamaica. After moving to London at an early age and later attending the University of London’s Goldsmiths College, he began writing politically charged poetry. While studying at the University of London, Johnson joined the Black Panther movement. He started a poetry workshop, working with other poets and musicians, to address issues of racial equality and social justice. Johnson’s dub poetry, with its culturally specific Jamaican patois dialect and reggae backbeat, was a precursor to the spoken word and rap music movements. Johnson (also known as “LKJ”) remains a prolific writer and performer. His three books of poetry, 1974′s Voices of the Living and the Dead, 1975′s Dread, Beat An’ Blood and 1980′s Inglan Is A Bitch, gained wide recognition, especially among the politically and social conscious. In 2002, Johnson became the first black poet and the second living poet to be published in the prestigious Penguin Modern Classics series. He also released several albums of his work, including Dread Beat An’ Blood and Forces of Victory, both released in the late 1970s; and Bass Culture and Making History, in 1980 and 1984, respectively.
Some of Johnson’s distinguished awards include an Honorary Visiting Professorship at Middlesex University in London (2004), and a silver Musgrave medal from the Institute of Jamaica for distinguished eminence in the field of poetry (2005). His work has been translated into several languages and he has toured extensively throughout Europe, Japan, South Africa, Brazil and other nations. Commenting on why he started to write poetry, Johnson said, “The answer is that my motivation sprang from a visceral need to creatively articulate the experiences of the black youth of my generation, coming of age in a racist society” (The Guardian; March 28, 2012). (Source: “Linton Kwesi Johnson.” Bio. A&E Television Networks, 2014. Web)
Coming from Far: Caribbean Writers on Home and Otherness
(Readings and Discussion)
Friday, 11 July 2014
435 West 116th Street
Jerome Greene Hall
Columbia University School of Law
Room 101/103
1:30pm – 3:00pm
Participants: A. Naomi Jackson, author of Who Don’t Hear Will Feel; Stephen Narian, winner of the Small Axe Literary Prize; and Tiphanie Yanique, author of Land of Love and Drowning
Moderator: Nicolas Laughlin, Program Director, NGC Bocas Lit Festival
Presented by the annual NCG Bocas Lit Festival as part of the Harlem Book Fair. See full HBF schedule here.
The NGC Bocas Literary Festival brings together writers, readers, performers, and publishers for a five-day celebration of books and writing. At the heart of the NGC Bocas Lit Fest are a series of readings by some of Trinidad and Tobago’s and the Caribbean’s finest writers of fiction and poetry — from authors of books already considered contemporary classics to prizewinning newcomers. Join the celebration through these readings and discussion.
36 Writers. 18 Countries. WORD!
Sunday, 8 June 2014 2:00pm – 8:00pm
Medgar Evers College 1650 Bedford Ave, Brooklyn NY
EMAIL: [email protected]
INFO: 718-783-8345 / 718-270-6917 / 718-270-6218
FACEBOOK: http://on.fb.me/1ttle87
TICKETS: http://bit.ly/1nkS8qj
DONATION: $10 – adults. $5.00 – children
Roundtables
2:00
Space on the Shelf – Creativity and commerce as it relates to Caribbean writers and the Publishing Industry
Avril Ashton – Secret Cravings Publishing
Ashton Franklin – Franklin & Franklin Publishing
Johanna Ingalls – Akashic Books
Moderator: Ron Kavanaugh, publisher, Mosaic Literary Magazine
3:00
Verse in Print – Where the poem will live, in traditional publishing or in digital media.
Jason Price (Belize), leaves of love
Monique Simon (Antigua & Barbuda), T.H.E. Carib Kindling: Fire Lights!
Mervyn Taylor (Trinidad & Tobago), The Waving Gallery
Moderator: Anthony ‘Wendell’ DeRiggs, author, Reflections and Ole Talk
4:00
Speaking in Tongues – Translation in formal and informal language
Adam Mansbach (USA), Go de Rass to Sleep
Kellie Magnus (Jamaica), Go de Rass to Sleep
Anthony Polanco (Panama)
Yolaine St. Fort (Haiti), For the Crown of Their Heads
Moderator: Dhanpaul Narine, president, Shri Trimurti Bhavan
Young Readers
2:00
(Under 8yrs.): Culture Making – Literature That Defines Us
Kellie Magnus (Jamaica), Little Lion Goes for Gold
Carol Ottley-Mitchell (St. Kitts – Nevis), Chee Chee in Paradise
Ibi Zoboi (Haiti), A is for Ayiti
Moderator: Karlene Largie, Union of Jamaica Alumni Associations
3:00
Seeing Self – Illustrators as storytellers
Ricardo Cortes (Mexico)
Laura James (Jamaica), Anna Carries Water
Joseph Zoboi (Trinidad & Tobago)
Moderator: Ingrid Charles, Aruban Antillean Association
4:00
Coming of Age – Journeys into the Unknown
Chen Chin (Jamaica), The Adventures of Flat Head
CJ Farley (Jamaica), Game World
Joanne Skerrett (Dominica), Abraham’s Treasure
Clyde Viechweg (Grenada), Caribbean Twilight: Tales of the Supernatural
Moderator: Beverly Benjamin-George, Friends of the Antigua Public LIbrary
5:00
New Voices – Open Mic
A stage, a microphone, a poem; a world of possibilities
Moderator: Rose October Edun, Guyana Cultural Association
Adult Readers
3:00
Lest We Forget – When that’s all you have memory, memorial and memoir
Lloyd Crooks (Trinidad & Tobago), Ice and Eyes in the Sun
Hubert Guscott (Jamaica), Mystical Speed
D C Campbell (Grenada), Blood of Belvidere
Carole Boyce Davies, author, Caribbean Spaces: Escapes from Twilight Zone – Moderator
4:00
(Re)defining Home – Caribbean-American writers on place and voice
Jennifer Davis Carey (US/Barbados), Near The Hope
Nyasha Laing (US/Belize), The Year of Buriels
Idrissa Simmonds (Canada/Haiti/Jamaica), Heirloom
5:00
Words and Colours – The happy pairing of visual artists who write.
Anna Ruth Henriques (Jamaica), The Book of Mechtilde
Deborah Jack (St. Marteen/St. Martin)
Iyaba Mandingo (Antigua & Barbuda), Sins of My Fathers
Michèle Voltaire Marcellin (Haiti), Lost and Found
6:00
Wordsmiths – New Voices. New Tales.
Annette Vendryes Leach (Panama), Song of the Shaman
Petra Lewis (Trinidad & Tobago), The Sons and Daughters of Ham
Katia Ulysse (Haiti), Drifting
7:00
Get Up! Stand Up! – Texts of Empowerment II
Adissa AJA Andwele (Barbados), Just Words
Arielle John (Trinidad & Tobago), Sea, Land and Mountains
Michèle Voltaire Marcellin (Haiti), Lost and Found
Hermina Marcellin (St. Lucia)
David Mills (US/Jamaica), Sudden Country
Ras Osagyefo (Jamaica), Psalms of Osagyefo
Maria Rodriguez (Puerto Rico), Brooklyn’s Daughter
Ras Yah Yah (St. Lucia)
Message adapted from email announcement.
“Styling at the Afro Spot: Black Gods, Black Aesthetics”
Christopher Winks lecture “Styling at the Afro Spot: Black Gods, Black Aesthetics” in conjunction with exhibition: “Abdias Nascimento: Artist, Activist Author”
Tuesday 13 May at 12:15 pm
Godwin-Ternbach Museum
405 Klapper Hall
65-30 Kissena Boulevard
Flushing, NY 11367
Professor Christopher Winks (QC Comparative Literature) will lecture on the politics of Afro-Atlantic artistic representation.
ABDIAS NASCIMENTO: ARTIST, ACTIVIST, AUTHOR
28 April – 21 June 2014
This exhibition, organized by the GTM and John Collins, Director of the Program in Latin America and Latino Studies in collaboration with the Afro-Brazilian Studies and Research Institute (IPEAFRO), displays forty artworks by Abdias Nascimento (1914-2011), a critical political and artistic figure in Brazil and the African diaspora, an activist and founding force in Brazil’s black movement, as well as an author, playwright, senator, and artist.
For more information visit the website here.
Message adapted from email announcement.
Award-winning photographers and Artists, Nikki Kahn and Keisha Scarville, both women of Guyanese heritage, will share their artistic visions and global portfolios and talk about their ongoing work to tell Guyana’s stories via the image.
Thursday, 24 April 2014
6:30 pm
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture
515 Malcolm X Blvd, New York, NY 10030
Hosted by Grace Aneiza Ali, founder of OF NOTE Magazine. Curated by Terrence Jennings.
RSVP here.
Visually Speaking @ the Schomburg is a photographic conversation series focused on highlighting the works and life experiences of photographers and industry insiders through their distinct visual lens and insight.
Announcement adapted from email announcement.
A reading by Elizabeth Nunez hosted by Natasha Gordon-Chipembere at Brooklyn Friends School
Thursday, April 24, 2014
6:00pm – 7:30pm
Brooklyn Friends School
375 Pearl Street, Meeting House
Brooklyn, NY
This is a free and open to the public reading by Elizabeth Nunez from her new memoir, Not For Everyday Use. Anton Nimblett, author of Sections of an Orange, will be the discussant. Books and signing will be available after the talk along with refreshments.
“Gender and the Caribbean Body,” a Conversation with Nicolás Dumit Estévez, Gerard H. Gaskin, and Kettly Mars. This event is free and open to the public.
Monday, April 28, 2014
7:00 p.m. – 8:45 p.m. with reception to follow (RSVP encouraged)
25 Broadway, 7th Floor
Division of Interdisciplinary Studies at the Center for Worker Education of CUNY
New York, NY 10004 (Please bring photo i.d. for security)
From throughout the Caribbean – the Dominican Republic, Haiti, and Trinidad – writer Kettly Mars, visual and performing artist Nicolás Dumit Estévez, and photographer Gerard H. Gaskin come together to discuss what it means to be a Caribbean artist operating identity at home and within the cultural centers of the ‘global north.’ How does an artist negotiate one’s nationality with one’s varying citizenships to communities throughout the many ‘Caribbeans’ that take form in Amsterdam, New York, London, or Paris? How do varying media and performance styles contribute not only to how art is created in the ‘Caribbean,’ but also to how the ‘Caribbean body’ is perceived by the general public? How is gender affected by these processes?
“Gender and the Caribbean Body” is the culmination of a multi-stage exploration of gender and sexuality sponsored by the CUNY Diversity Projects Development Fund and Barnard College. Organized by Alessandra Benedicty (City College), Kaiama Glover (Barnard College), Maja Horn (Barnard College) and Kelly Baker Josephs, this effort aims to provide an opportunity for sustained transcolonial discussion of gender in the Caribbean.
The goal of this proposed multi-stage program on “Gender and the Caribbean Body” is to bring together scholars and students working on the Caribbean from the Francophone, Anglophone and Hispanophone traditions to determine connections and disconnections across habitual borders. Discourses of gender and sexuality in the Caribbean are overwhelmingly limited to linguistic, and therefore colonial, parameters. This semester, the “Gender and the Caribbean Body” reading group worked to speak across these divisions and on April 28, we open this discussion up to the public with a panel of three talented artists. More information on the panelists and the reading group can be found on the event website.
Facebook page provided by Africana Studies at Barnard College.
CaFa Film Nights
Womens History Month Edition
28 March, 2014 at 7:30 p.m.
Nicolas Brooklyn
570 Fulton Street
This month, in honor of Women’s History Month, CaFa is showcasing the work of 6 very talented, emerging filmmakers who are women and just so happen to be Caribbean women. While women are still in the minority when it comes to making films, there has been a steady growth in the number of women choosing film as their storytelling medium. Come out and join CaFa as they share a sampling of these works. CaFa’s screening will feature the work of 6 filmmakers, from 6 countries, exploring 6 different themes: love, loneliness, pain, destiny, desire, and separation. CaFa will follow up each film with a discussion of the theme raised and share more intimate details on the filmmakers and their work.
About the filmmakers: