MCC-UE 1025

#BLACK LIVES MATTER:

RACE, MEDIA, AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS

Tu/Th 2:00PM – 3.15 PM / Bldg: WAVE 367

Instructor: Nicholas D Mirzoeff

E:

Cell: 646 673 2650

Web: https://wp.nyu.edu/howtoseetheworld/

This class concentrates on the use of media by and for the Black Lives Matter movement. We will historicize the movement by examining Reconstruction, Civil Rights and the Black Power movement. We will contextualize it by learning about the prison-industrial complex and the New Jim Crow. At the heart of our discussion will be media in and for the movement. We'll look at performative resistance like Hands Up, Don't Shoot;Die Ins; and the role of social media in shaping resistance. We will get to the heart of what happened in Ferguson by reading the grand jury transcripts. We'll look at how #BlackLivesMatter has challenged art, cinema and museums. And we'll consider what actions to take next.

Honor Code: read this part!

This is a big deal subject. No one has to be here, so if you register, remember that someone else would like to be in the class who can’t be. You need to commit not just to attending all sessions, barring infectious illness and serious personal situations (notes required), but also to engaging with the materials every week. It’s too important a subject for people who do not want to participate both verbally and in writing every week. Silent presence in the room does not constitute attendance. Remaining in the class past the first week indicates your acceptance of these conditions. As this is an honor code, there will not be endless reminders in class but not maintaining these conditions will lead to grade penalties.

Class methods

The class alternates between lecture format and discussion of readings with the discussions held on Tuesday shaping the lecture on Thursday. Exercises and reading reports in groups are a key part of the class. Students will be divided into four groups and each will do two report backs on the reading/viewing for that week (look at the syllabus for details) and ask the rest of the class to work through the material, whether in small group discussion, whole class discussion, writing exercises or whatever other format you decide.

Outcomes

In addition to the participation requirements listed in the syllabus, graded pass/fail, there are two major requirements. A short paper is due on March 2, reflecting on how the historical section of the course has changed your understanding of #BlackLivesMatter (detailed assignment to follow).

The primary assignment is a collective publication on the themes of the seminar. This might be in PDF or online. Each group will write a section of the publication, collectively or individually. The publication is a media activist project around the themes of the seminar. Groups present their approach to their section and then we will combine the finished projects to make a collective outcome for the class.

Assessment is designed around consistent participation and engagement. A successful student doesn’t always have the ‘right’ answer, s/he tries their best. Please see the separate document “Policies” for more information on grading policy.

Attendance 10%

Pass/fail exercises 20%

Participation 20%

Short paper 20%

Publication participation and production: 10% proposal and presentation 20% final product

Resources

Beginning with the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, scholars and activists have created a range of extensive booklists and syllabi that will give you access to any further reading you might want:

Black Panther syllabus and booklist: http://www.aaihs.org/blackpanthersyllabus/

Black Lives Matter and Charleston syllabus and booklist: http://www.aaihs.org/resources/charlestonsyllabus/

Ferguson syllabus and reading: http://guides.lasalle.edu/c.php?g=439814&p=2997168

Search #Fergusonsyllabus

CLASS MEETINGS

Please note: subject to change if/when relevant events occur (by consultation and consensus)

Introductions and commitments

Week 1

T 1/24: Introductions

Th 26:

Race and/in History

Many Thousands Gone

Week 2

T 31:

Whiteness

We’ll begin working in groups today: bring in a written 3 paragraph response based on the readings

Readings: John Metta “I, Racist” PDF .

WEB Du Bois, “The Souls of White Folk.”

Response question: “Do you consider yourself white? What is your relationship to whiteness? What is whiteness?

Th 2 Feb

no class: Visit the African Burial Ground

First floor, Ted Weiss Federal Building at 290 Broadway in Lower Manhattan. Allow time to get through security

Week 3

T Feb 7

Bring in a written response to the African Burial Ground to share and turn in (pass/fail)

Th Feb 9

Viewing: 13th (dir. Ava DuVernay)

Week 4

T Feb 14

Group One

What is the importance of slavery to our understanding of racism and capitalism today?

Readings:

CLR James, from The Black Jacobins {PDF on NYU classes}

Sven Beckert “Slavery and Capitalism,” Chronicle of Higher Education http://m.chronicle.com/article/SlaveryCapitalism/150787/

Ta Nehisi Coates, “The Case for Reparations,” http://www.theatlantic.com/features/archive/2014/05/the-case-for-reparations/361631/

Black Citizenship in America

Th Feb 16

Capitalism, slavery and reparations

Week 5

T Feb 21

Group Two

What does it mean to be a citizen in Rankine’s work? What is her understanding of blackness? What can we learn from how she approaches these fundamental issues?

Claudia Rankine, “The Condition of Black Life is One of Mourning, “ http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/22/magazine/the-condition-of-black-life-is-one-of-mourning.html?_r=0

Claudia Rankine, Citizen

Bring written responses to class to share and turn in (pass/fail)

Abolition I: equality

The work of Black historians suggests that slavery was fundamental to modernity and that the enslaved freed themselves, rather than being set free. How does this approach change your understanding of Black life in the United States? What did abolition look like, then and since?

Th Feb 23: The Visual Culture of Reconstruction

Readings:

Abolition photography: posted on NYU Classes

Contrast with DW Griffith Birth of a Nation (1915) https://youtu.be/8uuCMA-yE64 (Warning: intensely racist)

Further information on Birth of a Nation: https://chnm.gmu.edu/episodes/the-birth-of-a-nation-and-black-protest/

And Nate Parker, Birth of a Nation 2016

Abolition II: freedom under the law

How do we understand the Civil Rights Movement today? This section concentrates on the sense of what remained to be done after the passage of the Voting Rights Act in 1965 and the hopes for more than just legal freedom.

Tu Feb 28

Group Three

Where Do We Go From Here?

In this meeting, we’ll read and discuss two chapters of Dr. Martin Luther King’s 1967 book of this title and his shift toward a strategy of opposing racism, militarism and materialism.

Read or listen to Dr. King’s “Beyond Vietnam” speech: http://kingencyclopedia.stanford.edu/encyclopedia/documentsentry/doc_beyond_vietnam/

Th Mar 2

The Inseparable Triplets and Black Power

Abolition III: The Next American Revolution

Many Black Lives Matter activists have presented the movement as the third stage of abolition: justice.

T Mar 7

Group Four

Watch Grace Lee, American Revolutionary and read Grace Lee Boggs The Next American Revolution

Answer one of the questions that Boggs posed for us here:

http://www.yesmagazine.org/issues/climate-solutions/commentary-the-fierce-urgency-of-now

Th Mar 9

Detroit from Fordism to the Trump Election

Short responses to Abolition I and II due today (grace period till March 13).

Spring Break!! March 11-18

The New Jim Crow

T Mar 21

Group One

What is the New Jim Crow?

Reading Michele Alexander: The New Jim Crow.

Th Mar 23

Mass incarceration as government

#Michael Brown Grand Jury Hearings

T Mar 28 and Th Mar 30

After the murder of Michael Brown on August 9, 2014 Ferguson MO, St. Louis prosecutor Robert McCulloch undertook to release all the materials from the grand jury hearings. Dividing the materials across the class, we will undertake a collective reading. What can we learn from this archive? What questions remain?

Materials

http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/11/25/us/evidence-released-in-michael-brown-case.html?&hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=a-lede-package-region&region=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=2

Week 11

T Apr 4

Group Two

Black Lives Matter

How did Black Lives Matter come together and form its key actions?

Sources:

#Ferguson Activism

The new activist movement began in Ferguson that changes the face and style of activism in the United States. This week we take the measure of what has happened there and continues.

Alicia Garza, “A Herstory of the #BlackLivesMatter Movement” http://thefeministwire.com/2014/10/blacklivesmatter-2/

Ferguson context

Sarah Kendzior, “Why Ferguson has been in a state of emergency for years”

http://qz.com/301180/why-ferguson-has-been-in-a-state-of-emergency-for-years/

and “Ferguson Inc.” http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/03/ferguson-inc-115765.html

Emmett Rensin : “After The Train Leaves Town,” https://lareviewofbooks.org/essay/train-leaves-town/

Interview with Rev. Sekou: http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/32039-rev-sekou-on-today-s-civil-rights-leaders-i-take-my-orders-from-23-year-old-queer-women

Deray McKesson, “Ferguson and Beyond.” http://bit.ly/1MeavrK

--Hands Up, Don’t Shoot

From this: http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-hands-up-20140813-story.html

to this: Jonathan Capehart, “Hands Up Don’t Shoot Was Built on a Lie,” https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan/wp/2015/03/16/lesson-learned-from-the-shooting-of-michael-brown/

Cristian Farias, “Hands Up Don’t Shoot Was Not Built on a Lie,” http://www.newrepublic.com/article/121322/doj-ferguson-report-doesnt-mean-hands-dont-shoot-was-lie

--Die Ins

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/dec/19/die-ins-demand-that-we-bear-witness-to-black-peoples-fears-that-theyll-be-next

Th Apr 6

Social Justice Activism now

Week 12

Futures and Presents

T April 11

Group Three

What kind of social change might BLM create?

Reading: Movement for Black Lives A Vision for Black Lives

https://policy.m4bl.org/

Th April 13

What is the present condition of Black Lives Matter?

Week 13

T April 18

Response: Art, Visual Culture and Performance #BlackLivesMatter

Group Four

Artists and performers have been at the forefront of #BlackLivesMatter. This week we review their work: what did you find most effective? How were you inspired?

Materials:

Respond (art exhibit): http://smackmellon.org/index.php/exhibitions/past/respond/

Flexn, Park Ave Armory (Brooklyn dance movement): https://youtu.be/8ThdDEkwSCA?list=PL7MGCoP-mG3IDspw2NtP_5dNXPvlYrRHD

Bree Newsome cutting down the Confederate flag: http://bluenationreview.com/exclusive-bree-newsome-speaks-for-the-first-time-after-courageous-act-of-civil-disobedience/

Titus Kaphar (African American painter) : http://observer.com/2015/01/titus-kaphar-talks-criminal-justice-his-time-painting-and-first-show-at-jack-shainman/

and http://www.jackshainman.com/artists/titus-kaphar/

Dread Scott (African American performance artist): http://www.dreadscott.net/

Ti-Rock Moore (white ally ): http://hyperallergic.com/222106/an-art-exhibition-featuring-michael-browns-body-has-many-people-angry/

Th April 20

Project workshop

Week 14

T April 25

#Collective Reflections

Where are we now? What has happened since the inauguration?

Th April 27

How will your group approach the publication project? During this week you should define plans and send me an outline (a paragraph).

Week 15

Project presentations

T May 2

Each group should offer a 15-20 minute presentation on how they envisage their section of the publication: co-ordination and collaboration encouraged!

Groups 1 and 2

Th May 4

Groups 3 and 4

Projects due now till May 8 latest.

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