CLASSIFICATION
Swallow ID:
10028
Partner Institution:
Concordia University
Source Collection Title:
SpokenWeb AV
Source Collection ID:
ArchiveOfThePresent
Source Collection Description:
SpokenWeb Audio Visual Collection
Source Collection Contributing Unit:
SpokenWeb
Source Collection URI:
Source Collection Image URL:
https://archiveofthepresent.spokenweb.ca/_nuxt/img/header-img_1000.fd7675f.png
Series Title:
SpokenWeb Events
Sub Series Title:
SpokenWeb AV
ITEM DESCRIPTION
Title:
SpokenWeb Events AV,
Virtual Listening Practice Guided by Faith Paré, 21 October 2020
Title Source:
https://spokenweb.ca/events/virtual-listening-practice-guided-by-faith-pare/
Language:
English
Production Context:
Internet recording
Identifiers:
[]
Rights
Rights:
Creative Commons Attribution (BY)
License:
Creative Commons Attribution (BY)
CREATORS
Name:
Faith Paré
Name:
Jason Camlot
Dates:
1967-
CONTRIBUTORS
MATERIAL DESCRIPTION
DIGITAL FILE DESCRIPTION
Duration:
01:01:00
Size:
1,664,737,683 bytes
Notes:
MP4 video
Title:
Faith Paré_Final_Edited
Content Type:
Video Recording
Dates
Date:
2020-10-21
Type:
Production Date
LOCATION
Address:
1400 Boulevard de Maisonneuve O, Montreal, QC, H3G 1M8
Venue:
Concordia University McConnell Building
Latitude:
45.4968036
Longitude:
-73.57792785757887
CONTENT
Contents:
Black Noise: Poetics of Afro-Congregation
If dispersal created the Afro-diaspora, then who do we become when we are gathered? This SpokenWeb Listening Practice session will feature early thoughts on how Black creators across poetry, music, and performance have explored the soundscapes of congregated Blackness, from the hold of the slave ship to contemporary uprisings in urban centres across North America.
Black congregation has been a massive anxiety of, and threat toward, state power since Bois Caïman due to fear of revolt. Black congregation has also been a vehicle of social justice and healing. Together, we will first discuss the weaponization of sound against public gathering in the 21st century, before expanding into artistic considerations of how Black sociality serves as an antidote to hyper-individualism in Western economic, political, and cultural realms.
NOTES
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