ERC Consolidator Grant
Tales of the Diasporic Ordinary. Aesthetics, Affects, Archives
Migration is almost always framed as the result of exceptional circumstances, as in the 2015 refugee crisis for instance. This impacts the reception of narratives produced by those living in the diaspora. Works by Black and ethnic minority artists are overwhelmingly associated with labels that set them apart from the unmarked norm. These frameworks favour generational models such as the Windrush generation in Britain, so-called guest worker literature in Germany, and ethnic and area studies designations in the US. Such formulas reinforce an understanding of migration as perpetually new. By turning to what we call Tales of the Diasporic Ordinary, this project asks what happens if we instead apply a ‘normalising’ perspective to the study of contemporary diasporic art. We centre on three conceptual terms: aesthetics, affects, and archives. This, firstly, disrupts models of national canon formation and considers (queer) diasporic artistic practice and aesthetics as entangled with post-World War II global histories of the decline of empire, neo-imperialism, and the more recent rise of the New Right. Secondly, drawing on innovative methods from autotheory and queer diasporic critique, the project stipulates that “ordinary” diasporic texts promote an affective bearing that exceeds the binary of romanticising the homeland of once and neoliberal ideals of assimilation and integration. Thirdly, the analysed texts complicate official historiographies and contribute to an archive of the lived experiences of migrants and their children across generations, exposing the continuity of racism. Artistic practice can acknowledge negative affects and contribute to a reimagination of community that goes beyond national and heteronormative constraints. Thus, the project underlines the relevance of Tales of the Diasporic Ordinary to challenge racism and foster new modes of belonging.
Contact
diasporic.ordinary[at]hu-berlin.de
Team Members
Principal Investigator (PI)
Prof. Dr. Elahe Haschemi Yekani
Postdoctoral Researchers
Dr. Anja Sunhyun Michaelsen and Anne Potjans
Doctoral Researchers
Fenja Akinde-Hummel and Thao Ho
Student Assistants
Wassan Ali and Alexis Mertens
More information and latest news on the Tales of the Diasporic Ordinary Blog:
Follow us on:
https://blogs.hu-berlin.de/todo/
Project Information and Fact Sheet on CORDIS.