Dartmouth Events

"Got to Give It Up: Notes on the Art of Blackness"

Join us as Professor Gillespie considers the aesthetic, cultural, and historiographic frequencies of the art of blackness as well as new conceptual circuits for understanding ....

Thursday, May 2, 2024
12:30pm – 2:00pm
Haldeman 246
Intended Audience(s): Alumni, Faculty, Postdoc, Staff, Students-Graduate, Students-Undergraduate
Categories: Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, Films

Join us as Professor Gillespie considers the aesthetic, cultural, and historiographic frequencies of the art of blackness as well as new conceptual circuits for understanding Black visual historiography. This is part of our Black Culture/ Black Life Speaker Series.

About the speaker: 

Michael Boyce Gillespie is author of Film Blackness: American Cinema and the Idea of Black Film (Duke University Press, 2016) and co-editor of Black One Shot, an art criticism series on ASAP/J. His work focuses on black visual and expressive culture, film theory, visual historiography, popular music, and contemporary art. His writing has appeared in Regeneration: Black Cinema 1898-1971ASAP/JFilm QuarterlyFilm Commentliquid blacknessJournal of Popular Music Studies, as well as other journals and collections. He was the consulting producer on The Criterion Collection releases of Deep CoverShaft, and Drylongso. He is Associate Professor of Cinema Studies in the Martin Scorsese Department of Cinema Studies at New York University. He is currently working on a monograph entitled Dreams and False Alarms: Ambivalence, Pleasure, and the Art of Blackness.

For more information, contact:
IBICL

Events are free and open to the public unless otherwise noted.