Dr. Tiffany N. Florvil (University of New Mexico) shares how her research on the history of social movements, subculture activist archives, Germany, and Black Studies shaped her monograph, Mobilizing Black Germany: Afro-German Women and the Making of a Transnational Movement. As she discusses some of the topics explored in her book - collectivity, quotidian intellectuals, and Germany's erasure of its own colonial history - and how voices in the diaspora in their regional/local contexts belong in robust trans(inter)national collectivity.
"To Think About Sex Work Differently, We Need to Think About Sex Differently" (with Dr. Juana María Rodríguez)
Art Criticism and the Black Imagination (with Erica N. Cardwell)
Afropessimism and Writing Shattered (with Dr. Matthieu Chapman)
Essaying ‘The Loneliness Files” (with Athena Dixon)
'To Be An Adult Immigrant is to Lead a Life with 4 Senses, Instead of 5' (with Nishanth Injam)
Reading Trauma in Colonialism and Being Misread (with Dr. Noreen Masud)
Resistance and 'Radical Intimacy' (with Sophie K. Rosa)
The Making of a 'Modern' Thailand (with Mai Nardone)
Extrapolating Geographies and Intertextuality (with Lamya H.)
The Pleasure of the Text In the Kitchen, In Domestic Spaces, In Theories of the Body (with Rebecca May Johnson)
‘Monetary Authorities’: Racial Capitalism and Unconditional Decolonization (with Dr. Allan E. S. Lumba)
Technocapitalism, Nostalgia, and Pop Culture (with Jinwoo Chong)
‘How Do the Living Come Back to Life?’ (with Morgan Talty)
Symmetry/Asymmetry of Language and Translation (with Su Cho)
Untangling 'Trauma, Tresses, & Truth' (with Lyzette Wanzer)
'Sonic Memories' and Silences (with Cija Jefferson)
An American Education Through Illness and Nourishment (with Dure Aziz Amna)
Translation As Literary (Co)Creation (with Nguyễn An Lý)
Afro-Brazilian Media and Antiracist Visual Politics (with Dr. Reighan Gillam)
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