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Diversity Reading List

Helping you include authors from under-represented groups in your teaching

Beyoncé and Jay-Z’s Tiffany Advert Criticized by Friends of Basquiat

Posted on June 20, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Close friends of artist Jean-Michel Basquiat have spoken out against the advert from jewellers Tiffany which features Beyoncé and Jay-Z posing in front of one of his paintings saying it was “not really what he was about”. Basquiat’s 1982 work Equals Pi sits behind the couple in the campaign as Beyoncé wears a 128.54-carat yellow diamond, the first black woman to have done so.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Class, Culture, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, RaceTagged aesthetic value, appropriation, artistic expression, elitism, high consumptionLeave a comment

Chicana Art: The Politics of Spiritual and Aesthetic Altarities

Posted on June 20, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

This book examines the work of Chicana artists, feminist Mexican-Americans who aim at interrogating their identity through art. In this chapter, Pérez examines what she regards as “the general intellectual vindication of Indigenous epistemologies that characterized much of the thought and art of the Chicana/o movement”. She argues that, in opposition to the male Chicano perspective that characterized the early movement, Chicana artists embrace their Indigenousness in a way that aims not simply at antagonizing Eurocentric culture, but that aims at “a genuinely more decolonizing struggle at the epistemological level”. The chapter focuses on writers Gloria Anzaldúa, Cherríe Moraga, Ana Castillo, and Sandra Cisneros, and on artists Frances Salomé España, Yreina Cervántez, and Esther Hernández.

Posted in Aesthetic Normativity and Value, Class, Culture, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Individual Arts and Crafts, RaceTagged afro-latinx, art, chicano/a, mestizaje, spiritualityLeave a comment

Toward an Aesthetics of Race: Bridging the Writings of Gloria Anzaldúa and José Vasconcelos

Posted on June 20, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

This paper examines the relationship between the aesthetic frameworks of José Vasconcelos and Gloria Anzaldúa. Contemporary readers of Anzaldúa have described her work as developing an “aesthetics of the shadow,” wherein the Aztec conception of Nepantilism—i.e. to be “torn between ways”—provides a potential avenue to transform traditional associations between darkness and evil, and lightness and good. On this reading, Anzaldúa offers a revaluation of darkness and shadows to build strategies for resistance and coalitional politics for communities of color in the U.S. To those familiar with the work of Vasconcelos, Anzaldúa’s aesthetics appears to contrast sharply with his conceptions of aesthetic monism and mestizaje. I propose, however, that if we read both authors as supplementing one another’s work, we can see that their theoretical points of contrast and similarity help frame contemporary philosophical discussions of racial perception.

Posted in Class, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Individual Arts and Crafts, RaceTagged Gloria Anzaldúa, José Vasconcelos, latinx feminism, mestizaje, racial perceptionLeave a comment

The Latin American Identity and the African Diaspora: Ethnogenesis in Context

Posted on June 20, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Olliz Boyd’s essay examines Blackness in the Latin American literary practices with the aim of showing its centrality to Latin American cultures. He argues that the African heritage of Latin America has been erased as a result of Eurocentric mestizaje. Olliz Boyd first examines this erased heritage in the understanding of race in Latin America and its peculiar processes of racialization, before moving on to centring the analysis on aesthetic practices and literature in particular. Olliz Boyd’s essay examines the erasure of Afro-Latininidad from a perspective that differs from Hooks’ analysis of the erasure of self-identified Afro-Latin communities. He argues that mestizos in general have mixed-race roots that include not just European and Indigenous ancestry, but African as well. The erasure of Afro-Latininidad is, thus, more radical as it involves the negation of an Afro-Latin reality at the heart of mestizaje.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Personal and Social Identity, RaceTagged african diaspora, blackness, cultural heritage, erasure, mestizo cultureLeave a comment

La Negra as Metaphor in Afro-Latin American Poetry

Posted on June 20, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Carter examines the anti-Black sentiment in Latin American culture and pays particular attention to how, even in negrista poetry aimed at contributing to the fight against oppression of Black people, Black women are used as a symbol of sensuality and primitiveness. The paper argues that when Black women feature in poetry in the figure of la mulata, they are associated with nature and portrayed as inherently evil, sensual and primitive. Moreover, while representations of Black men evolved to focus on their inner consciousness, rather than on their physical attributes, and to combat oppressive imagery and symbolism, la mulata continued being used as a satire aimed at inviting Afro-Latin communities to take positive steps towards improving their social conditions. They were used to advance a criticism for how the anti-Black sentiment at the heart of popular conceptions of mestizaje ends up being internalized by members of Afro-Latin communities, so that Black women are represented as renouncing Blackness and engaging in a “whitening” process.

Posted in Culture, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, Personal and Social Identity, RaceTagged afro-latinx, latin american literature, mestiza womanhood, negrista poetryLeave a comment

Indigenous Inclusion/Black Exclusion: Race, Ethnicity, and Multicultural Citizenship in Latin America

Posted on June 20, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

This article analyses the causes of the disparity in collective rights gained by indigenous and Afro-Latin groups in recent rounds of multicultural citizenship reform in Latin America. Instead of attributing the greater success of indians in winning collective rights to differences in population size, higher levels of indigenous group identity or higher levels of organisation of the indigenous movement, it is argued that the main cause of the disparity is the fact that collective rights are adjudicated on the basis of possessing a distinct group identity defined in cultural or ethnic terms. Indians are generally better positioned than most Afro-Latinos to claim ethnic group identities separate from the national culture and have therefore been more successful in winning collective rights. It is suggested that one of the potentially negative consequences of basing group rights on the assertion of cultural difference is that it might lead indigenous groups and Afro-Latinos to privilege issues of cultural recognition over questions of racial discrimination as bases for political mobilisation in the era of multicultural politics.

Posted in Culture, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Law and Public Policy, RaceTagged african diaspora, afro-latinidad, afro-latinx, black aesthetics, collective rights, indigenism, mestizaje, multiculturalismLeave a comment

Seven Interpretative Essays on Peruvian Reality

Posted on June 20, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

In this essay, Mariátegui offers an analysis of Peruvian literary practices and a criticism of some of its central figures. He argues that what has been construed as a “national literature” erases the contributions of Indigenous cultures to Peruvian identity, and, in doing so, it partly contributes to the marginalization of Indigenous Peruvians.

Posted in Class, Culture, Equality, Freedom and Rights, Justice, Race, Work, Labor, and LeisureTagged colonialism, hispanism, indigenismo, latin american literature, marginalisation, mestizaje, social privilegeLeave a comment

Against Simple Removal: A Defence of Defacement as a Response to Racist Monuments

Posted on June 2, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

In recent years, protesters around the world have been calling for the removal of commemorations honouring those who are, by contemporary standards, generally regarded as seriously morally compromised by their racism. According to one line of thought, leaving racist memorials in place is profoundly disrespectful, and doing so tacitly condones, and perhaps even celebrates, the racism of those honoured and memorialized. The best response is to remove the monuments altogether. In this article, I first argue against a prominent offense-based account of the wrong of simply leaving memorials in place, unaltered, before offering my own account of this wrong. In at least some cases, these memorials wrong insofar as they express and exemplify a morally objectionable attitude of race-based contempt. I go on to argue that the best way of answering this disrespect is through a process of expressively “dehonouring” the subject. Removal of these commemorations is ultimately misguided, in many cases, because removal, by itself, cannot adequately dishonour, and simple removal does not fully answer the ways in which these memorials wrong. I defend a more nuanced approach to answering the wrong posed by these monuments, and I argue that public expressions of contempt through defacement have an ineliminable role to play in an apt dishonouring process.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Archaeology and History, Culture, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, Justice, Law and Public Policy, Personal and Social IdentityTagged answering, contempt, monuments, racism, respectLeave a comment

Why Yellow Fever Isn’t Flattering: A Case Against Racial Fetishes

Posted on January 26, 2022December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Most discussions of racial fetish center on the question of whether it is caused by negative racial stereotypes. In this paper I adopt a different strategy, one that begins with the experiences of those targeted by racial fetish rather than those who possess it; that is, I shift focus away from the origins of racial fetishes to their effects as a social phenomenon in a racially stratified world. I examine the case of preferences for Asian women, also known as ‘yellow fever’, to argue against the claim that racial fetishes are unobjectionable if they are merely based on personal or aesthetic preference rather than racial stereotypes. I contend that even if this were so, yellow fever would still be morally objectionable because of the disproportionate psychological burdens it places on Asian and Asian-American women, along with the role it plays in a pernicious system of racial social meanings.

Posted in Applied Ethics, Culture, Forms of Government, Gender, Sex, and Sexuality, Justice, Law and Public Policy, Mental States and ProcessesTagged feminism, philosophy of race, sex, sexual ethicsLeave a comment

African Art in Deep Time: De‐race‐ing Aesthetics and De‐racializing Visual Art

Posted on January 14, 2020December 3, 2024 by Simon Fokt

Abstract: In two essays in the ART/Artifact(1988) exhibition catalog, white American museum curator Susan Vogel and white American philosopher Arthur Danto pronounce that Africans do not distinguish between art and nonart. Although seemingly objective empirical statements, their assertions about Africa and its art are racially based ruminations of a white supremacist worldview. I argue that in theorizing within the category of race they produced racialized aesthetics that commit the Eurocentric fallacy of upholding systemic racist objectives. I argue that (1) their assertions fail to be about African art, but about hegemony and power; (2) as the longest enduring artistic activity of humanity, African art is an important check to racialized aesthetics; (3) art is produced outside the category of race and from a critically conscious awareness of the world; and (4) art bespeaks creativity and presupposes the artistic and moral values of a culture in the manipulation and transformation of physical reality.

Posted in Aesthetic Experience and Judgement, Aesthetic Normativity and Value, Culture, Ethics and Socio-Politics of Aesthetics, RaceTagged art and culture, Eurocentrism, racismLeave a comment

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