Single Stories and the Subaltern’s Voice

Can the Subaltern Speak? by Gayatri Spivak is a piece that focuses on how the experiences and the feelings produced from these lived experiences of marginalized groups are skewed by second hand reports from white academics and media. Spivak’s piece immediately made me think of a Ted Talk by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie called “The Danger […]

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The “Subaltern” in South Carolina

Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak’s piece, “Can the Subaltern Speak”, can easily be applied to news coverage of modern tragedies. For example, these ideas are relevant to the reporting of the massacre at Mother Emanuel church in Charleston on June 17, 2015. As Spivak says, the colonizer creates a narrative with knowledge collected from words rather than experiences. […]

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Unveiled and Spivak’s “Can the Subaltern Speak?”

In Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak’s article, “Can the Subaltern Speak?”, the questioned is raised of whether or not the subaltern can speak and be able to have their own voice that has not been distorted through the lens of primarily white academics, or through the lens of someone who has not experienced what they are going […]

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Unveiled and The Subaltern

Can The Subaltern Speak? is a significant piece of work authored by Gayatri Spivak, and became an extremely important essay within postcolonial theory. The piece is quite dense– the beginning sections seem to be conversations with philosophers like Deleuze and Foucault. In the concluding section, however, Spivak truly digs into the meat of her argument. From […]

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(Dis)Identification in “Paris Is Burning”

In the film Paris Is Burning, director Jennie Livingston immerses herself in black and latino queer culture in New York City in the mid-to-late ‘80s in order to document the developing drag scene of this time. The piece includes portraits of elegance, energy, and community, characteristics that define this style of performance. Paris Is Burning […]

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Roman’s Revenge; a showcase of McMillan’s performing objecthood

As I initially read McMillian’s piece, Performing Objects, I found myself questioning the relationship between theory and practice. Were black performance artists reading black feminist theory? Or were black feminist theorists writing about black performance artists? DId these two every really come into conversation with one another, or were they existing in separate spheres? One artist […]

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Janelle Monae’s Android as the Avatar

In this particular song, Monae’s character is trapped in an asylum in which dancing is outlawed for its magical effects. As she dances she transcends the walls of her room/cell, gaining access to a multicolored world of self-expression. Ultimately, she is defeated by demons who have mirrors for faces, symbolizing how those who confine you […]

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Tyler The Creator – Yonkers

Google defines “goblin” as “a mischievous, ugly, dwarflike creature of folklore.” And this song, whose video includes Tyler swallowing a bug, subsequently vomiting, and then eventually hanging himself, comes on Tyler the Creator’s debut studio album, Goblin. At play here, then, are certain foundational elements of Uri McMillan’s notion of avatars,which “act as mediums — between […]

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