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conference image by Vi Khi Nao & conference design by Ethan Widlansky


Thinking Its Presence: Racial Vertigo, BlackBrown Feelings, and Significantly Problematic Objects

Pomona College

THINKING ITS PRESENCE 2023: 

An interdisciplinary conference on race, creative writing, and artistic and aesthetic practices

March 30, 2023- April 2nd, 2023

OVERVIEW

In Pedagogies of Woundedness: Illness, Memoir, and The Ends of the Model Minority, Dr. James Lee employs the condition of “cruel optimism” theorized by the late Lauren Berlant to scrutinize the ambivalent feelings Pauline Chen narrates in her memoir Final Exam: A Surgeon’s Reflections on Mortality. Lee further frames Berlant’s point by saying that “Cruel optimism is the condition of maintaining an attachment to a significantly problematic object…the fear is that the loss of the promising object/scene itself will defeat the capacity to have any hope about anything.” At the Thinking Its Presence conference this year, we have invited Dr. Lee to present his work and to turn his discussion to questions of how BIPOC scholars, writers, activists, historians, and artists manage both hope and its opposite affective feelings in their works, and how attachment to “problematic objects,” systems, and institutions produce and perpetuate difficult and violent conditions for the psyche and the body. Concerning the ‘body,” Dr. Valorie Thomas’s work on racial and diasporic vertigo is of particular importance here: specifically how the body “incorporat[es] the idea of trauma, displacement and dispersal that the African diaspora has experienced through the slave trade. . . . being uprooted and dislocated—and culturally disrupted and traumatized—that’s one version of vertigo.” 


We are celebrating the Claremont Colleges, California communities, and the Thinking Its Presence communities of past participants to present on these themes related to their areas of expertise (which include creative writing, scholarly, theoretical, and interdisciplinary work) and to invite their colleagues to present a set of panels related to these themes of racial and diasporic vertigo, necessary keywords in our fields, and problematic objects, through creative writing, literature, aesthetic practices, social justice, and performance studies.


Saturday, April 1 • 11:00am - 12:30pm
Los Angeles County Reading: Lynne Thompson, Cherene Sherrard, Raquel Guitterez, and Leila Mansouri

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Introduced by Emily Schuck. 

Registration, Moderator, Intro...
avatar for Emily Schuck

Emily Schuck

Pomona College

Speakers
avatar for Lynne Thompson

Lynne Thompson

Lynne Thompson is the 2021-2022 Poet Laureate for the City of Los Angeles. The daughter of Caribbean immigrants, her poetry collections include Beg No Pardon (2007), winner of the Perugia Press Prize and the Great Lakes Colleges Association’s New Writers Award; Start With A Small... Read More →
avatar for Raquel Gutiérrez

Raquel Gutiérrez

Raquel Gutiérrez is an arts critic/writer, poet and educator. Gutiérrez is a 2021 recipient of theRabkin Prize in Arts Journalism, as well as a 2017 recipient of the The Andy Warhol FoundationArts Writers Grant. Gutiérrez teaches in the Oregon State University-Cascades Low ResidencyCreative... Read More →
LM

Leila Mansouri

Assistant Professor of English, Scripps College
Leila Mansouri is a fiction writer, essayist, and scholar of American literature. Her research has appeared or is forthcoming in American Literature, J19: The Journal of Nineteenth-Century Americanists, and NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction. She has also written for The Believer, Los... Read More →
avatar for Cherene Sherrard

Cherene Sherrard

Professor, Pomona College


Saturday April 1, 2023 11:00am - 12:30pm PDT
Smith Campus Center: Rose Hill Theatre