Examines how filmmaker Wong Kar-wai’s use of pre-existing music to create the soundtracks for his films constitutes a practice of musical remixing that challenges conventional notions of musical composition.
Mariana Ortega presents a phenomenological study of aesthetics grounded in the work of Latinx artists, theorizing that photography is an affective medium crucial for processes of self-formation, resistance, and mourning in Latinx life.
Katarzyna Pieprzak examines how contemporary visual, literary, and performance art of the Maghreb has the potential to change the terms, histories, and imagined futures of mass housing in North Africa.
Smith follows the classic song’s long and varied journey, from Brel’s iconic 1966 performance on French television to Simone’s cover to Shirley Bassey’s English-language version (“If You Go Away”) to its contemporary manifestations in popular culture.
Taking as his primary object Palestinian refugee camps, created in the fallout of the eliminatory violence of Israel’s founding, Abourahme shows how these camps become the primary place where settler colonial attempts to dominate space and time encounter Indigenous refusal.
Sarah A. Whitt exposes how Native American boarding schools and other settler institutions like asylums, factories, and hospitals during the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries worked together as a part of an interconnected system of settler domination.
Examines the entanglements of humans, animals, and technologies across South Korea and the United States at the turn of the... Læs mere
Tells the classic track’s story, charting the relationship between pop music, collective politics, and dominant institutions of state, corporations, and... Læs mere
Over the course of a thirty-eight-year friendship, painter Beauford Delaney and writer James Baldwin shared their private lives and... Læs mere
Colonialism and imperialism