Acrylic, metal, blue and a means of preparation: Imagining and living Black life beyond the surveillance state
This talk is a series of “small comments in no particular order” on the interventions and innovations made by artists whose works grapple with the surveillance of Black life, from policing to encryption, electronic waste, and artificial intelligence. The interventions under study trouble surveillance and its various methodologies, and are “a means of preparation” for imagining and living Black life beyond the surveillance state. (The quoted text is borrowed from Avery F. Gordon’s Hawthorn Archive).
Learning Materials
- Op-ed: The Feds are watching: A history of resisting anti-Black surveillance, 2020
- Publication: Everybody’s got a little light under the sun: Black luminosity and the visual culture of surveillance, 2012
- Book: Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness, 2015
- Publication: “Your personal information is being requested”: Ancestry testing, stunt coding, and synthetic DNA, 2016
Learn more about the Race and Technology Research Lecture Series >
Speaker Details
Simone Browne is Associate Professor of African and African Diaspora Studies, and Research Director of Critical Surveillance Inquiry with Good Systems, at the University of Texas at Austin.
She is currently writing her second book manuscript, Like the Mixture of Charcoal and Darkness, which examines the interventions made by artists whose works grapple with the surveillance of Black life, from policing, privacy, smart dust and the FBI’s COINTELPRO to encryption, electronic waste and artificial intelligence. Together, these essays explore the productive possibilities of creative innovation when it comes to troubling surveillance and its various tactics, and imagining Black life beyond the surveillance state. Simone is the author of Dark Matters: On the Surveillance of Blackness.
A longer version can be found here https://liberalarts.utexas.edu/aads/faculty/sb28889 (opens in new tab)
- Date:
- Speakers:
- Dr. Simone Browne
- Affiliation:
- Associate Professor of African and African Diaspora Studies, and Research Director of Critical Surveillance Inquiry with Good Systems, at the University of Texas at Austin
Series: Race and Technology: A Research Lecture Series
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Our Genomes, Our Selves?
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On Race and Technoculture
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Acrylic, metal, blue and a means of preparation: Imagining and living Black life beyond the surveillance state
Speakers:- Dr. Simone Browne
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Women of Color and the Digital Labor of Repair
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The New Jim Code: Reimagining the Default Settings of Technology & Society
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Computing Technology as Racial Infrastructure: A History of the Present & Blueprint for Black Future(s)
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The Vanishing Indian Speaks Back: Race, Genomics, and Indigenous Rights
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Racist Tropes and Labor Discipline: How Tech Inherits and Reproduces Global Imaginaries of Race and Work
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