Knowledge production and the construction of ‘Africa(ns)’ in the Caribbean

Author(s):  
Verene Shepherd
2021 ◽  
pp. 263497952110427
Author(s):  
Leniqueca A Welcome ◽  
Deborah A Thomas

The recent renewal of attention to abstraction within Black literary and visual studies, it seems to us, has to do with an interest in the various ways abstraction rejects ascribed categories, eschews narrow assumptions about “relevance,” and embraces experimentation during a moment when it is arguably most needed. Abstraction moves us simultaneously outside of representative realism, and it embraces research practices that often require the kind of intimacies that have long been the bread and butter of anthropology. As multimodal ethnographers, we have long made our ethical commitments to interlocutors through embodied participation and collective knowledge production. In this essay, we attend to questions of abstraction, witnessing, and refusal within our own filmic and photographic practices addressing state violence in the Caribbean. We are interested in the spatio-temporality of both witnessing and refusal and in the relationships between form and audience. We are interested in how forms of abstraction capture the ephemeral, performative, affective, non-linear, and unpredictable ways something that feels like sovereignty circulates and is transmitted from one to another, without contributing to a process of overexposure or a desire for transparency.


Author(s):  
Carl Thompson

This article explores the contributions to science made by three women travellers in the Romantic period: Maria Riddell (1772–1808), who visited the Caribbean between 1788 and 1791; Maria Graham (later Callcott, 1785–1842), who visited South America between 1821 and 1825; and Sarah Bowdich (later Lee, 1791–1856), who visited Madeira and West Africa in the late 1810s and early 1820s. As well as mapping their scientific accomplishments, the article explores their integration into contemporary scientific networks and circuits of knowledge production, paying particular attention to their connections with the so-called ‘Banksian empire’ of Sir Joseph Banks (1743–1820). Simultaneously, it addresses the diverse strategies adopted by Riddell, Graham and Bowdich as they sought to negotiate the constraints undoubtedly faced in this period by women seeking to participate in scientific endeavours; however, the article also argues that such constraints did not ultimately prevent Riddell, Graham and Bowdich from attaining scientific authority and influence, both within the contemporary scientific community and with the wider public.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 31-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tao Leigh Goffe

The politics and the poetics of sugar and its production have long connected African and Asian diasporas as the material legacy of the Caribbean plantation. This article considers the repurposing of sugar as art and the aesthetic of artists of Afro-Chinese descent, Andrea Chung and Mara Magdalena Campos-Pons. Part of a diasporic tradition of employing sugar as a medium that I call sugarwork, their artwork evokes the colonial entanglements of nutrition and labour on the plantation, centered in the belly. The womb makes, and the stomach unmakes. This practice, employing the materiality of foodstuffs, is part of a gastropoetics, wherein centering the sensorium opens alternative forms of knowledge production to the European colonial archive. As the descendants of enslaved Africans and indentured Chinese, Campos-Pons and Chung metabolize sugar in ways that grapple with the futurity of the plantation to form a new intertwined genealogy of black and Chinese womanhood.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leopoldo Avellán ◽  
Claudia Calderón ◽  
Giulia Lotti ◽  
Z’leste Wanner

By analyzing a novel dataset on publications by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), we shed light on the extent to which the knowledge production of a multilateral development bank can reach its beneficiaries. We find that IDB publications are downloaded mostly in the American continent, with Colombia, Peru, Mexico and the United States leading the ranking. Moreover, during the COVID-19 pandemic downloads of IDB publications increased, both in the world and in Latin America and the Caribbean. Some characteristics of publications are significantly associated with higher numbers of downloads, such as the language of publications: documents in at least two languages or in Spanish only are downloaded more often than documents in English only, suggesting that it is important to disseminate research in the language of the targeted audience. As for the online discussion on the IDB, we find that mentions of the IDB touch different sectors important for development (especially modernization of the state, health, labor markets and financial markets), they increase when a document is published, and also when a loan is approved.


1963 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 69-70
Author(s):  
WALTER MISCHEL
Keyword(s):  

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