Curating dehumanization in the age of hyperglobalization : approach to treating with global latino art practices

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Abstract/Contents

Abstract
"Curating Dehumanization in the Age of Hyperglobalization: Approach to Treating with Global Latino Art Practices" is a curatorial project. I am looking, from a transnational perspective, at different artworks from the last 40 years that deal with dehumanization, a form of classification in which people consider some human beings better than others or even deny any kind of humanity to some of them. I am particularly considering examples of dehumanization based on gender, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic class, and at their intersections. As I am dealing with a cognitive problem that has social implications, I am analyzing creative and artistic art practices through the lens of art therapy, and I am showing the role these practices can play on a collective scale. Thus, I classify the artworks I am working with into two categories: diagnosis and prognosis. Using these categories, which along with therapy and prophylaxis compose the main areas of medical practice, I show how these artworks describe some of the forms in which dehumanization manifests in our present and imagine some future consequences of this pathological classification. I am using a diverse body of work that spans through different media, but also through different territories. As I am looking at the age of hyperglobalization, I consider several artworks that take place in Latin American countries like Brazil, Colombia, Cuba, Honduras, or Mexico; at hybrid spaces like the Caribbean (including some French and English-speaking regions) or the Mexico-US border; and at Latino artists that work in Asia, Africa, North America, or Europe. In "Diagnosis" I first look at waste and waste classification in contemporary Brazil and classify selected artworks according to the materials they employ. While focusing on Brazil, I discuss several contemporary visual, photographic, and filmic works created in the 1980s and beyond. But I focus much of my attention on Carolina Maria de Jesus's Quarto de despejo (1960). Then I look at femicides on the US-Mexico border and I focus on a short text by Sergio González Rodríguez that forms part of his book of essays, The Femicide Machine. I also consider here other artworks that employ a strategy of showing violence by concealing it through language. In "Prognosis" I discuss different artworks that visualize different dehumanizing futures. I divide them according to their relation to two diametrically opposed figures and could become even more prominent in the future: refugees and tourists. My exploration of refugees is guided by several installation pieces by the French-Brazilian artist Dominique Gonzales-Foerster, who provides glimpses and feelings of possible post-apocalyptic futures where all spaces are potential shelters, and all people are potential refugees. On the other side, I will use the figure of the tourist to understand the configuration and marginalization of the touristic setting. Accordingly, I look primarily at several performances by Cuban-American artist Coco Fusco, who plays the role of the touristic attraction or of the anthropologist/tourist of the future who sees in our society the last remnants of humanity.

Description

Type of resource text
Form electronic resource; remote; computer; online resource
Extent 1 online resource.
Place California
Place [Stanford, California]
Publisher [Stanford University]
Copyright date 2023; ©2023
Publication date 2023; 2023
Issuance monographic
Language English

Creators/Contributors

Author Soler Reyes, Cristian Felipe
Degree supervisor Barletta, Vincent
Thesis advisor Barletta, Vincent
Thesis advisor Briceno, Ximena
Thesis advisor Kwon, Marci
Thesis advisor Peponi, Anastasia-Erasmia
Degree committee member Briceno, Ximena
Degree committee member Kwon, Marci
Degree committee member Peponi, Anastasia-Erasmia
Associated with Stanford University, School of Humanities and Sciences
Associated with Stanford University, Department of Iberian and Latin American Culture

Subjects

Genre Theses
Genre Text

Bibliographic information

Statement of responsibility Cristian Felipe Soler Reyes.
Note Submitted to the Department of Iberian and Latin American Culture.
Thesis Thesis Ph.D. Stanford University 2023.
Location https://purl.stanford.edu/kh674tb3812

Access conditions

Copyright
© 2023 by Cristian Felipe Soler Reyes
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 3.0 Unported license (CC BY-NC).

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