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In coordination with the speakers, Seminar 12: Strike That has been postponed from May 13 to June 3. In acknowledgment of the student protests at The New School and their demands, including calls for a strike, Agnes Etherington Art Centre will host the program on its Zoom platform.
Writing and speaking in public entail constant editing, revision, redaction, and correction. Oftentimes these are dictated by style guides, genre conventions, or shifting cultural and political discourse—what some might call "political correctness”—but more often than not, by the writer's or speaker's practice of pushing the boundaries of language and craft and propriety and legitimacy.
Strike That brings together visual artists, writers, and poets who critically reflect on changing language in the broader cultural and political landscape and their own work. How are vocabulary, grammar, and syntax negotiated, updated, or rejected to reflect the fissures between inner lives and political realities? How do we do so in real time and respond to crises while attending to the repair or recuperation of linguistic histories and legacies from violence and dispossession? What of translation, legibility, and opacity? When do lexicons fail us, and when are they a tool for empowerment and resistance? From neologisms to reclaiming outdated terminology, the speakers discuss the poetic and political stakes in word choice as speech and speech acts are censored, criminalized, and the speaker silenced. This conversation features Demian DinéYazhi’, Native American artist, poet, and activist, Fargo Nissim Tbakhi, Palestinian-American performance artist and writer, and SA Smythe, transmedia storyteller and assistant professor of Black Studies & the Archive at the University of Toronto.
The last in the Vera List Center for Art and Politics’ two year Correction* Seminar Series, this program is co-presented with the Agnes Etherington Art Centre at Queen’s University, Ontario. It is organized and moderated by Nasrin Himada and Eriola Pira.
Correction* Seminar Series
The twelve-part Correction* Seminar Series is structured as an open curriculum and presented from September 2022 through May 2024. Led by Vera List Center faculty and staff, each monthly seminar in this two-year series explores the perils and potentials of the political, social, and metaphorical implications of “correction.” Bridging theory and practice, Correction* unfolds through three distinct research clusters every semester set to guide our joint investigation into Restitution, the Body, and Carcerality. It is presented as part of the Barbara Jordan Lectures: The State of Democracy series and is supported by the Helen Shapiro Lectureship fund
The Vera List Center is committed to ensuring that our programs are accessible to and inclusive of all. Please let us know when registering if you need any accommodation.
Presented by Vera List Center for Art and Politics at Schools of Public Engagement.
By joining this online event, you will be prompted to accept Zoom Terms of Service. If the session is recorded, you acknowledge that by participating, your name, phone number, and profile picture might be visible to the public. You can customize your personal information when creating your Zoom account. The New School may use any recorded material from the event.
The Vera List Center tries to share its programs as widely as possible, which means recording our programming and making it available on the Vera List Center and The New School websites. By attending the event, you consent to photography, audio recording, video recording and its/their release, publication, or exhibition. You can view past Vera List Center events at veralistcenter.org/events/past.
The Vera List Center is committed to ensuring that our programs are accessible to and inclusive of all and as part of that, this program will feature American Sign Language interpretation as well as auto-generated captions. Please let us know when registering if you need these or any additional accommodations, or send an email to vlc@newschool.edu.
Committed to amplifying diverse voices, The New School offers more than a thousand public programs and events each year, providing fresh perspectives and unique learning opportunities. These lectures, exhibitions, concerts, and performances feature prominent and emerging artists, activists, and thought leaders.
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