A Practice of Abstraction: Race in the Field of Vision
This talk will try to explore the sense in which Ruth Wilson Gilmore’s definition of racism as ‘a practice of abstraction, a death-dealing displacement of difference into hierarchies that organise relations within and between the planet's sovereign political territories,’ can be articulated in terms of visual regimes and artistic practices. To this end, I will dwell on how Stuart Hall’s account of the violence of racial abstraction – formulated in critical dialogue with Louis Althusser – informed his writings on the visual, and explore how Hall’s insights can be mobilised today, as racial regimes of vision become increasingly abstract and automated, spawning new modalities of hierarchy, displacement and violence.
Time
Tuesday, 20.01.26 - 06:15 PM
- 07:45 PM
Topic
History of Art and Media Science
Speaker
Alberto Toscano (Sociology, Goldsmiths London)
Target groups
Researchers
Students
All interested
Languages
English
Location
Online
Reservation
not required
Registration/Ticket
Additional Information
Organizer
Department of Art History & Institute of Media Studies at the University of Bonn, Brandenburg Center for Media Studies (ZeM)
Contact