Theorist in Residence

This initiative invites theorists focusing on media, urban or global studies to spend up to two weeks at CalArts to teach workshops, faculty seminars and give a public lecture.


Spring 2024

Denise Ferreira da Silva

Denise Ferreira da Silva is the Samuel Rudin Professor in the Humanities at the Department of Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literatures, New York University. Her artistic and academic work reflects and speculates on questions crucial to contemporary philosophy, political theory, black thought, feminist thought, and historical materialism. She is the author of Unpayable Debt (2022), Dívida Impagável (2019), and Toward a Global Idea of Race (2007). Her articles have been published in journals such as Social Text; Theory, Culture & Society; philoSOPHIA; Griffith Law Review; Theory & Event and The Black Scholar, among others. Her artworks include the films Serpent Rain (2016), 4 Waters: Deep Implicancy (2018), Soot Breath /Corpus Infinitum (2020), Ancestral Claims/Ancestral Clouds (2023) with Arjuna Neuman and Poethical Readings and Sensing Salon, with Valentina Desideri.

On-Campus Events

Wednesday, Jan. 17 - Seminar with A & P students and faculty 2-5 pm, Cafe A

                   Public lecture open to all 6-8 pm, Langley

Thursday, Jan. 18 - Seminar with A & P students and faculty, 10 am–1 pm, Cafe A

Off-Campus Event

Saturday, Jan. 20 — REDCAT screening of Soot Breath, Corpus Infinitum, 8:30 pm

Conversation with Denise Ferreira da Silva, co-creator Arjuna Neuman, and MA Acting Director Janet Sarbanes

About the film: A film dedicated to tenderness. It reproduces a radical sensibility we learned from listening to the blues, from listening to skin, to heat, and from listening to echoes, listening itself.We ask, could tenderness dissolve total violence? Could tears displace total extraction? Towards this we reimagine the human and its subject-formation away from predatory desire and lethal abstraction, away from the mind and eyes and noble senses, away from total extraction and its articulations as ethnography, border regimes, slavery, sexual abuse, trade and mining. Instead we turn to skin, resonance, and tenderness as the raw material of our reimagined earthy sensibility. Remembering that to be tender is to soften like supple grass, and to attend to is to care for, to serve. Serving, we know is the opposite of slavery just as violence dissolves with care.

About Arjuna: Arjuna Neuman has been working across Europe and internationally for many years. His transnational career is also reminiscent of his birth on an airplane, giving him dual citizenship and many passports. He is the co-founder of archiveofbelonging.org, a resource database for migrants and refugees.

Neuman’s work has been presented in both group and solo shows at various international venues and festivals, included the Lubumbashi Biennial, Democratic Republic of Congo; Bergen Assembly, Norway; Sharjah Biennial, UAE; Venice Biennial, Italy; National Archaeological Museum of Naples Naples, Italy; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Istanbul Modern, Turkey; Museum of Art, Architecture and Technology, Lisboa, Portugal; and Whitechapel Gallery, Bold Tendencies, and LUX, all in London, amongst many others. His writing has been published in Relief Press, Into the Pines Press, LA Canvas, Art Fetch, LA Art Resources, The Journal for New Writing, Artvoices, Flaunt, LEAP, Hearings, World Records, Umbau, and e-flux. He has mixtapes essays on Dublab, Radio Alhara, and NTS.


Spring 2022

Maggie Nelson

Maggie Nelson is the author of several acclaimed books of poetry and prose, many of which have become classics defying categorization. Her nonfiction titles include the national bestseller On Freedom: Four Songs of Care and Constraint (Graywolf Press, 2021), the New York Times bestseller and National Book Critics Circle Award winner The Argonauts (2015), The Art of Cruelty: A Reckoning (2011; a New York Times Notable Book of the Year), Bluets (2009; named by Bookforum as one of the top 10 best books of the past 20 years), The Red Parts (2007), and Women, the New York School, and Other True Abstractions (2007). Her poetry titles include Something Bright, Then Holes (2007) and Jane: A Murder (2005; finalist for the PEN/ Martha Albrand Art of the Memoir). She has been the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in Nonfiction, an NEA in Poetry, an Innovative Literature Fellowship from Creative Capital, an Arts Writers Fellowship from the Andy Warhol Foundation, and a MacArthur “Genius” Fellowship. She writes frequently on art, including essays on Carolee Schneemann, Matthew Barney, Sarah Lucas, Nayland Blake, Tala Madani, and Rachel Harrison, which will be collected in a volume of essays forthcoming from Graywolf Press in 2023. For over a decade, Nelson taught in the School of Critical Studies at CalArts. Since 2017, she has been a professor of English at the University of Southern California. She lives with her family in Los Angeles.

Schedule

Friday, January 14th, REDCAT, 10am-7:30pm
Care and Repair

VIRTUAL EVENT will be streamed via REDCAT and the Aesthetics & Politics YouTube Channel.

Join the MA Aesthetics and Politics program (School of Critical Studies, California Institute of the Arts) for a one-day line-up of reflections and performances on the themes of care and repair. Creative thinkers and critical artists will join forces in a focused but festival-like gathering to experiment with different forms of presentation, attention, and debate. Under pandemic conditions, and with topics ranging from land acknowledgment to architecture and the ethics of care, neoliberalism and the imperative to “take care of yourself,” climate-change and the post-critical turn to repair, this event will feature contributions by among others Églantine Colon, Anders Dunker, Stephanie Mei Huang, Jia Yi Gu, Nick Nauman, Manuel Shvartzberg Carrío, Theresa Ambo, Kelly Stewart, Lucinda Trask, Damon Young, Dimitri Chamblas, Amy Howden-Chapman, Mireya Lucio, Adilifu Nama, and Maggie Nelson. Audience participation expected.

  • 10am—10:10am—Opening remarks, Arne De Boever

PERFORMANCE 10:10am and throughout the day: Lucinda Trask, Platform with 3 sides

  • 10:15am—10:45am--Theresa Ambo, Kelly Stewart, Manuel Shvartzberg Carrío, “On Land Acknowledgement”
  • 10:45am—11:15am—Discussion

PERFORMANCE 11:15am--Dimitri Chamblas, Slow Show (screen version) 

PAUSE/ 12PM-1PM

PERFORMANCE 1:10pm--Lucinda Trask

  • 1pm—1:10pm—Opening remarks, Eglantine Colon
  • 1:15pm1:30pm— Églantine Colon, “The Problem with Breath” & Three Comments on Non-Reparative Care
  • 1:35pm-1:50pm—Damon Young, “The Greatest Love of All”
  • 1:55pm-2:10pm-- Adilifu Nama, “Bright Moments: Rahsaan Roland Kirk in the Age of Covid”
  • 2:10pm—2:40pm--Discussion

PERFORMANCE 2:40pm: stephanie mei huang, how to hobble a young horse

  • PAUSE/ 3:00-3:30PM
  • 3:30pm—3:40pm--Opening remarks, Arne De Boever

PERFORMANCE 3:40pm--Lucinda Trask

  • 3:45pm-4pm—Nick Nauman, “Take Stock in Decision”
  • 4pm—4:15pm—Jia Yi Gu, “Major Repairs / Minor Spaces”
  • 4:15pm—4:30pm—Anders Dunker, “Thinking Landscapes”
  • 4:30pm—5pm--Discussion

PERFORMANCE 5pm—5:15pm—Amy Howden-Chapman, featuring Mireya Lucio, “The Apologies”

  • 5:20pm—6:30pm--Roundtable with Maggie Nelson, featuring all participants, and moderated by Églantine Colon and Arne De Boever
  • Bonus
  • 7pm--Nick Nauman, “Hot broth and comestibles" (for conference speakers, performers, and MA students and faculty). Location TBA.
Monday, January 17th, REDCAT, 8:30pm
“Thinking Aloud With Others”

Public Lecture by Maggie Nelson (VIRTUAL EVENT)

Tickets available via REDCAT: https://web.ovationtix.com/trs/pe.c/10934939

Speakers and Performers for “Care and Repair”

Dr. Theresa Stewart-Ambo (Tongva/Luiseño) serves as an assistant professor of education studies and co-director of the Indigenous Futures Institute at UC San Diego. Her research explicates the role of higher education in Native Nation-building through an examination of historical and contemporary community-university relationships between Native nations and universities in California. Theresa holds a PhD in Education from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and was a UC President’s Postdoctoral Fellow from 2017-2019.  Her work has been published in the American Education Research Journal, Journal of Higher Education, International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, and Social Text.

Arne De Boever teaches American Studies in the School of Critical Studies at the California Institute of the Arts, where he also directs the MA Aesthetics and Politics program. He is the author of States of Exception in the Contemporary Novel (Continuum, 2012), Narrative Care (Bloomsbury, 2013), Plastic Sovereignties (Edinburgh, 2016), Finance Fictions (Fordham, 2018), and Against Aesthetic Exceptionalism (Minnesota, 2019). His most recent book is François Jullien’s Unexceptional Thought (Rowman & Littlefield, 2020).

Dr. Manuel Shvartzberg Carrió is assistant professor in the department of Urban Studies and Planning at UC San Diego, where he is also faculty in the Design Lab, co-Director of the Just Transitions Initiative, and a member of the Indigenous Futures Institute. Shvartzberg Carrió researches histories and theories of architecture and geopolitics, particularly how architectural technologies and territorial infrastructures mediate regimes of settler colonial violence, racial capitalism, and decolonial futures.

Dimitri Chamblas joined the dance school of the Paris Opera at the age of ten. Over the course of his career, he has collaborated with the choreographers such as William Forsythe, Boris Charmatz, Mathilde Monnier, and Benjamin Millepied among others. He co-founded Edna association with choreographer Boris Charmatz in 1992. Together they created the duet À Bras-le-corps, which has been performed throughout the world and entered the Paris Opéra ballet repertory in 2018. He participated in the creation of Benjamin Millepied’s Los Angeles Dance Project. In 2015, he was appointed Artistic Director of the 3e Scène – Opéra national de Paris. In 2017, he was appointed as Dean of the School of Dance at the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) in Los Angeles, where he lives. He was made a Chevalier of the Order of Arts and Letters by the French Ministry of Culture in 2019.

Églantine Colon is a writer, translator, and scholar specializing in cultural studies, literary studies, and critical theory. After some years teaching contemporary Critical Theory and French & Francophone Studies at UC Berkeley, she is now based in Los Angeles, where she is a visiting scholar at CalArts’ School of Critical Studies. She has published essays on urban margins and precarity, Science Fiction, and on the relationships between non-reparative care, form, and governmentality. Since 2020, she has been one of the co-editors of the journal SubStance. She is currently translating into French The Blue Clerk, by Dionne Brand.

Anders Dunker is a visiting scholar at CalArts’ School of Critical Studies and author of Rediscovering Earth - 10 Dialogues about the Future of Nature (O/R books). He is a Norwegian writer and theorist focusing on the planetary future and a contributor to Le Monde diplomatiqueModern Times Reviewkunstkritikk.com and The Los Angeles Review of Books, as well as a working member of the editorial board of Technophany - a Journal for Technology and Philosophy.

Jia Yi Gu is an architectural historian, curator, and designer. Her work focuses on histories of representation and display practices in architecture, with an emphasis on objects, exhibitions, and document history. She is director of MAK Center for Art and Architecture, co-director of the architecture research and design studio Spinagu with Maxi Spina, and Visiting Faculty in Architecture at the California College of Art.

Amy Howden-Chapman is an artist and writer, born in Aotearoa, New Zealand, and based in New York City. She is co-founder of the climate-crisis-and-culture platform, The Distance Plan (thedistanceplan.org), and a Visiting Assistant Professor at Pratt Institute.

Stephanie Mei Huang is a Los Angeles-based interdisciplinary artist. They use a diverse range of media and strategies including film/video, installation, social interventions, sculpture, writing, and painting. Through research and practice, they aim to erode the violent mythologies that perpetuate exceptionalist narratives, in the hopes of excavating forgotten histories. They yearn to locate sites of emergence from which we can perhaps fabulate adjacent histories. They most recently exhibited at the Hauser and Wirth Book Lab, the MAK Center for Art and Architecture, Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, the New Wight Biennial at the University of California Los Angeles, and the Arizona State University Art Museum (Tempe, AZ).

Mireya Lucio is a Puerto Rico-born artist, writer, director, and performer residing in Los Angeles. She is co-creator (with Sallie Merkel) of Emotional Labor Co., the feminist, multi-media culture-making magical entity responsible for the video series The Commons and the iterative Witches' Cabaret.

Dr. Adilifu Nama is a Professor of African American Studies at Loyola Marymount University. In books like Black Space, Super Black, and I Wonder U, he has mined American film, comics and music for the cultural politics of race and marginalization. He contends that genres and media that could be disregarded as escapism are arguably the most dominant expressions of and about our times. The Pop Culture Association honored his book Race on the QT: Blackness and the Films of Quentin Tarantino with the Best Reference/Primary Source Work Award.

Nicholas Nauman is a writer, cook, and musician (@nu.myn).

Maggie Nelson is the author of several acclaimed books of poetry and prose, many of which have become classics defying categorization. Her nonfiction titles include the national bestseller On Freedom: Four Songs of Care and Constraint (Graywolf Press, 2021), the New York Times bestseller and National Book Critics Circle Award winner The Argonauts (2015), The Art of Cruelty: A Reckoning (2011; a New York Times Notable Book of the Year), Bluets (2009; named by Bookforum as one of the top 10 best books of the past 20 years), The Red Parts (2007), and Women, the New York School, and Other True Abstractions (2007). Her poetry titles include Something Bright, Then Holes (2007) and Jane: A Murder (2005; finalist for the PEN/ Martha Albrand Art of the Memoir). She has been the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship in Nonfiction, an NEA in Poetry, an Innovative Literature Fellowship from Creative Capital, an Arts Writers Fellowship from the Andy Warhol Foundation, and a MacArthur “genius” Fellowship.

Kelly Leah Stewart (Tongva/Luiseño) is an Ed.D. student in the Joint Degree Program in Educational Leadership at the University of California San Diego and California State University, San Marcos. She earned a Master of Arts in American Indian Studies from the University of California, Los Angeles, and a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from California State Polytechnic University, Pomona. Building off her master’s thesis, (Re)writing and (Re)righting California Indian Histories: Legacies of Saint Boniface Indian Industrial School, 1890 to 1935, Kelly is currently working on her doctoral dissertation that will examine the legacy and educational experiences of California Indians who attended or are descendants of Catholic-run Mission Indian boarding schools in Southern California.

Lucinda Trask is a visual artist whose work is primarily concerned with reimagining the relationship between humans and what we perceive as inanimate material. She builds objects—ranging from sculptures to tools—to create new landscapes for the body to inhabit. Through use of these objects, and their construction methods, Lucinda encourages viewers to develop a mutualistic symbiosis with the matter they encounter in their daily lives, a shared responsibility between user and used. Her work takes many forms including installation, performance, sculpture, photography and writing.

Damon R. Young is Associate Professor of French and Film & Media at the University of California, Berkeley, and Visiting Associate Professor of Media Studies at Pomona College. He is the author of Making Sex Public and Other Cinematic Fantasies, shortlisted for the ASAP Book Prize, and co-editor of “The Cultural Logic of Contemporary Capitalism” (Social Text 127) and “Queer Bonds” (GLQ 17.2-3). He is currently working on two books: one on figures of refusal, sameness, transformation, and revolution in queer cinema and another on technological mediations of the self from the diary to Instagram.


Spring 2021

McKenzie Wark

McKenzie Wark is the author, among other things, of Capital is Dead (Verso Books), Sensoria (Verso Books), Reverse Cowgirl (Semiotexte) and various other things. Her next book is Philosophy for Spiders: On the Low Theory of Kathy Acker, to be published by Duke University Press in fall 2021. She is currently editing a special issue of eflux journal on trans | fem | aesthetics, to be published in Spring 2021. She was awarded the Thoma Prize for digital art writing in 2019. She is professor of culture and media at Eugene Lang College, the undergraduate liberal arts division of The New School, in New York City.

Schedule

Tuesday, Jan. 19, 10am-1pm (CalArts students only)

SEMINAR SESSION 1: “Capital is Dead: Is This Something Worse?”
McKenzie Wark

Readings:

  • Wark, Capital is Dead.
Wednesday, Jan. 20, 10am-1pm

PUBLIC LECTURE 1: “Philosophy for Spiders: On Kathy Acker”
McKenzie Wark; in conversation with Matias Viegener
View on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/AestheticsandPolitics

Friday, Jan. 22, 10am-1pm

PUBLIC LECTURE 2: “The Cis Gaze”
McKenzie Wark; Introduced and moderated by Andrea Fontenot
View on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/AestheticsandPolitics

Monday, Jan. 25, 10am-1pm (CalArts students only)

SEMINAR SESSION 2: “Dysphoric Planet”
McKenzie Wark

Readings:

  • Wark, Molecular Red, Preface and Conclusion.

  • Wark, General Intellects, Paul Preciado.


Spring 2020

Elizabeth Povinelli

Elizabeth is Franz Boas Professor of Anthropology and Gender Studies at Columbia University where she has also been the Director of the Institute for Research on Women and Gender and the Co-Director of the Centre for the Study of Law and Culture. Povinelli’s work focuses on developing a critical theory of late liberalism that would support an anthropology of the otherwise. Informed primarily by settler colonial theory, pragmatism and critical theory, this potential theory of the otherwise has unfolded primarily from within a sustained relationship with her Indigenous Karrabing colleagues in north Australia and across five books, numerous essays, and six films with the Karrabing Film Collective. Geontologies: A Requiem to Late Liberalism was the 2017 recipient of the Lionel Trilling Book Award. Karrabing films were awarded the 2015 Visible Award and the 2015 Cinema Nova Award Best Short Fiction Film, Melbourne International Film Festival and have shown internationally including in the Berlinale Forum Expanded, Sydney Biennale; MIFF, the Tate Modern, documenta-14, and the Contour Biennale.

As part of her tenure as Theorist in Residence, Povinelli will deliver two public lectures, one at REDCAT on January 27, 2020, and the other at the West Hollywood Public Library on January 31.


Spring 2019

N. Katherine Hayles

Author of the seminal How We Became Posthuman, which has been hailed as "the key text which brought posthumanism to broad international attention", Katherine Hayles has been an influential voice in arts and media discourse for decades. 

As part of her tenure as Theorist in Residence, Hayles will deliver two public lectures, and teach a closed intensive seminar to MA Aesthetics and Politics students in the 2019 spring term.

Lectures

  • "Human as Alien: From Frankenstein to Ex Machina and Annihilation" — Jan. 23, 2019 at 8:30 pm, at REDCAT. 

Tickets

  • “Media and/as the Environment" (Keynote Address to AIAC Conference)*— Jan. 26, 2019 at 6 pm 
West Hollywood Public Library
City Council Chambers
625 San Vicente Blvd.
West Hollywood, CA 90069

*This program is presented with the support of the City of West Hollywood’s WeHo Arts program.
For more information, please visit www.weho.org/arts or follow via social media @WeHoArts.



Spring 2018

Judith Butler

Butler is Maxine Elliot Professor in the Department of Comparative Literature and the Program of Critical Theory at the University of California Berkeley, and is a prominent continental philosopher and gender theorist. She is the author of notable books, including Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity and Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable?

Reprising her role as our Theorist in Residence in Spring 2015, Butler will deliver two new public lectures in addition to teaching a seminar for our MA students.

Lectures


  • "Critique, Crisis, and the Problem of Violence"—The Silver Screen Theater at the Pacific Design Center, 01/24/18, 7:30pm—free and open to the public*
  • "The Materiality of Mourning in the work of Doris Salcedo"—REDCAT, 01/26/18, 8:30pm—tickets available through the REDCAT website

*This program is presented with the support of the City of West Hollywood’s WeHo Arts program. For more information, please visit www.weho.org/arts or follow via social media @WeHoArts.


Spring 2017

Lauren Berlant

Berlant is George M. Pullman Professor of English at the University of Chicago. Her national sentimentality trilogy—The Anatomy of National Fantasy (1991), The Queen of America Goes to Washington City (1997), and The Female Complaint (2008) — has now morphed into a quartet, with Cruel Optimism (2011) addressing precarious publics and the aesthetics of affective adjustment in the contemporary U.S. and Europe. A co-editor of Critical Inquiry, she is also editor of Intimacy (University of Chicago Press, 2000, Chicago); Our Monica, Ourselves: The Clinton Affair and the National Interest (New York University Press, 2001, New York); Compassion: the Culture and Politics of an Emotion (Routledge, 2004, New York); and On the Case (Critical Inquiry, 2007). She blogs at Supervalent Thought and is also a founding member of the art/activist group Feel Tank Chicago.

Seminar and Lectures from Humorlessness

Public lectures:

  • Humorlessness/Politics: REDCAT, 02/01, 8:30pm—tickets available through the REDCAT website
  • Humorlessness/Comedy: West Hollywood Public Library, City Council Chambers, 02/03, 7:30pm—free and open to the public

Seminar (open to CalArts students only):

  • Classic Comedy Theory
  • Collective Curation on Comedic Art

Fall 2015

Thierry de Duve

De Duve is Distinguished Lecturer at Hunter College, New York, and was Kirk Varnedoe Visiting Professor at the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, for the fall semester of 2013. His English publications include Pictorial Nominalism (1991), Kant after Duchamp (1996), Clement Greenberg Between the Lines (1996, 2010), Look—100 Years of Contemporary Art (2001), and Sewn In the Sweatshops of Marx: Beuys, Warhol, Klein, Duchamp (2012). He is presently finishing a book of essays on aesthetics, forthcoming from the University of Chicago Press. As Theorist in Residence, his graduate-student lectures included “Why Kant Got it Right” and “Do Artists Speak on Behalf of All of Us?,” in addition to public lectures that included “Le Sens de la Famille: Aesthetics as the Transcendental Ground of Democracy.”

Lectures

  • “Why Kant Got it Right”
  • Tuesday November 3, 6:00-9:00pm — Closed Graduate (MA/MFA) Seminar: Aesthetics, Ethics, Politics—CalArts, D206
  • “Le sens de la famille: Aesthetics as the Transcendental Ground of Democracy”
  • Wednesday November 4, 8:00pm — Public lecture (free and open to the public): When is Art Political?—CalArts, Butler Building (BB4)
  • “Le sens de la famille”: Aesthetics as the Transcendental Ground of Democracy
  • Wednesday November 4, 8:00pm — Public lecture (free and open to the public): When is Art Political?—CalArts, Butler Building (BB4)

Spring 2015

Judith Butler

Butler is Maxine Elliot Professor in the Department of Comparative Literature and the Program of Critical Theory at the University of California Berkeley, and is a prominent continental philosopher and gender theorist. She is the author of notable books, including Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity and Frames of War: When Is Life Grievable? As Theorist in Residence, Butler gave four lectures assembled under the title, Demonstrating Precarity: Vulnerability, Embodiment, and Resistance, addressing questions of political dissent, protest, resistance and violence in light of recent events in the United States.

Lectures

  • “From Performativity to Precarity/Acts of Resistance” — West Hollywood Public Library, Council Chambers, Friday, January 23, 7pm.
  • "We, the People": Thoughts on Public Assembly — CalArts campus, LANGLEY, Friday, January 30th, 7pm.
  • “Vulnerability and Resistance” — REDCAT, Wednesday, March 4, 8:30pm.
  • “Interpreting Non-Violence” — CalArts campus, LANGLEY, Friday, March 6, 7pm.


Spring 2014

Fred Moten

Fred Moten is Professor of English at the University of California, Riverside and a member of the Writing Faculty at the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts, Bard College. He received his A.B. from Harvard University and his Ph.D. in English from the University of California, Berkeley. He is author of In the Break: The Aesthetics of the Black Radical Tradition (University of Minnesota Press), Hughson’s Tavern (Leon Works), B. Jenkins (Duke University Press), and co-author, with Stefano Harney, of The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning and Black Study (Minor Compositions/ Autonomedia). His forthcoming books are The Feel Trio (Letter Machine Editions) and consent not to be a single being (Duke University Press). In 2009 Moten was Critic-in-Residence at In Transit 09: Resistance of the Object, The Performing Arts Festival at the House of World Cultures, Berlin and was also recognized as one of 10 “New American Poets” by the Poetry Society of America; in 2011 he was a Visiting Scholar and Artist-in-Residence at Pratt Institute; in 2012, he was Whitney J. Oates Fellow in the Humanities Council and the Center for African American Studies at Princeton University; and in 2013 he was a Guest Faculty Member in the Summer Writers Program at the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics, Naropa Institute. Moten served the American Studies Association as a member of the Board of Managing Editors of American Quarterly from 2004 to 2007 and has been a member of the Editorial Collectives of Social Text and Callaloo, and of the Editorial Board of South Atlantic Quarterly. He was also a member of the Critical Theory Institute at the University of California, Irvine from 2002 to 2004 and a member of the Board of Directors for the Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies at the City University of New York from 2001 to 2002.

Lectures

  • "black kant (pronounced cant)" — March 18, 12-1:30pm, calarts CUBE, MA student seminar
  • "black kant (pronounced cant): an update" — March 18, 7-9pm, interventions lecture, calarts BB4
  • "black kant (pronounced cant)" — March 20th, 12-1:30pm, calarts CUBE, faculty seminar
  • "the sustain: blackness and poetry" — March 20, 8:30pm, public lecture, REDCAT


Spring 2013

April 17th-18th: Film-philosopher John Mullarkey taught a faculty seminar as well gave a public lecture on cinema, objects, and animals.

March 14th: Workshop with Brian Massumi and Erin Manning. Organized in collaboration with colleagues from the Center for New Performance, on "Performance, Body, and Presence."