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Monday, 30 November 2020

Ameliorative Homecomings: Framing the Queer Migrant in Documentary


 Ameliorative Homecomings: Framing the Queer Migrant in A Sinner in Mecca (2015) and Whos Gonna Love Me Now? (2016) 

published in The Garage Journal: Studies in Art, Museums & Culture, Issue 01 ‘Transitory Parerga: Access and Inclusion in Contemporary Art,’ edited by Vlad Strukov (University of Leeds): pp. 245-263. [open access link]



Cüneyt Çakırlar's study critically analyzes the themes of queer migrancy and homecoming in two recent documentaries. Parvez Sharma
A Sinner in Mecca (2015) documents the filmmakers journey from the U.S. to Saudi Arabia for his hajj pilgrimage. Using an essayistic, first-person documentary register, Sharma constructs a tension around his attachments to nation, religion, and sexuality. While the film offers a critique of religion as a punitive state apparatus, Sharmas pronounced proprietorial relation to a migrant gay Muslim identity functions in progressive counter-valence. Tomer and Barak Heymanns portrait documentary, Whos Gonna Love Me Now? (2016), tells the story of Saar, an Israeli gay man who was expelled from his Jewish community in Israel and has emigrated to London. Treating Saars HIV diagnosis as the marker of an affective crisis, the film oscillates between two distinct spaces of domesticity: Saars family in Israel, and his circle of friends in the U.K. In both films, the conflict between religion, national belonging, and sexual identity is resolved through a normative pull towards home and its affective restructuring of intimacy in the context of queer migrancy. The ameliorative status of homecoming operates as a default resolution in these films. A longing for home is that which both films register as the constitutive attachment of the queer migrant.

 

Keywords: affect, essay film, first-person, intersectionality, LGBTQ documentary, migration, religion, sexuality, transnationalism


To access the open-access journal, visit https://thegaragejournal.org/en/


The Garage Journal: Studies in Art, Museums & Culture is an independent interdisciplinary academic platform that advances critical discussions about contemporary art, culture, and museum practice in the Russian and global contexts. It publishes original empirical, theoretical, and speculative research in a variety of genres, celebrating innovative ways of presentation. Fully peer-reviewed, The Garage Journal provides an open-access source book of ideas for an international audience.


Tuesday, 24 November 2020

 

The Care Manifesto (The Care Collective)

Wednesday 25th November 3-4pm (via zoom)

For joining details, contact Martin O'Shaughnessy (martin.oshaughnessy@ntu.ac.uk ) 

 

ALL WELCOME!

 



In this talk The Care Collective discuss their recently published book The Care Manifesto (Verso 2020): 


"We lay out a radical vision for a truly caring world, demanding that we put care at the very heart of our lives and our politics. In the wake of COVID-19, the need to acknowledge our mutual interdependence and vulnerabilities is more urgent than ever. Care must be valued and shared, no longer tolerated as an exploited form of labour, shouldered mainly by women and the poor. Rejecting the extensive carelessness so evident today, we lay out our model of ‘universal care’, which calls for inventive forms of collective care at every scale of life. We propose expanding kinships through 'promiscuous care' and building communities strengthened by co-operative and public ownership. We show how genuine care involves reinvigorating welfare states, creating alternatives to capitalist markets and caring across borders. The Manifesto, in short, imagines a world in which care is everywhere—from our most intimate connections to our relationship with the planet itself."

 

The Care Collective 

Andreas Chatzidakis is Professor of Marketing and Consumer Ethics at the School of Business and Management, Royal Holloway University of London. His works include the Consuming Modern Slavery report (2018) and Ethics and Morality in Consumption(2016) 

 

Dr Jamie Hakim worked at Attitude magazine from 2003 and is now Lecturer in Media Studies at UEA. He is Principal Investigator of the ESRC-funded project 'Digital Intimacies’, partnered with the Terrance Higgins Trust, and author of Work That Body: Male Bodies in Digital Culture (2019) 

 

Jo Littler is a Professor in the Sociology Department and is Director of the Gender and Sexualities Research Centre at City, University of London, UK.  Her books include Against Meritocracy (2018) Radical Consumption?  (2008) and with Roshi Naidoo The Politics of Heritage: The legacies of ‘race’' (2005).  

 

Dr Catherine Rottenberg is Associate Professor in American and Canadian Studies at the University of Nottingham. Her books include The Rise of Neoliberal Feminism (2018), Black Harlem and the Jewish Lower East Side (2014), and Performing Americanness(2008). 

 

Lynne Segal is Anniversary Professor of Psychology & Gender Studies at Birkbeck, University of London. Her many books include Beyond the Fragments (1980) What is to be done about the family?(1983) Why Feminism? Gender, Psychology, Politics (1999) Slow Motion: Changing Masculinities, Changing Men (2007) Straight Sex(1994) Making Trouble (2007) and Out of Time (2013).

 


11/11/2020 3-4, as part of our ongoing research seminar series, the Centre is very pleased to welcome Su Ansell to talk about her experimental film, Breast'work. 


As she explains:

 
"My experimental films and installations explore female experience through layered poetic connections. The intention, through exhibition and accompanying writings is to generate dialogue and debate about the issues and feelings raised by the work, and thereby to contribute to a counter-cultural narrative concerning the representation of women. There is a strong personal element to the pieces, the aim of which is to provide a stimulus for collective memory. By deconstructing the familiar, the work encourages the spectator to consider other perspectives, and also their relationship to the creation they are viewing. I hope thereby to engage new audiences with film as art. The work and my reflections on it, contribute to the expression of an alternative, rich, complex and powerful visual history of female existence."
 
The talk will be of interest to feminist and gender studies scholars and creatives alike!