“Objects and Memory: Engendering Private and Public Archives” Workshop

cosponsored by the Columbia Cultural Memory Colloquium and the Department of Art History and Archaeology

Friday, March 23, 1-7pm
612 Schermerhorn Hall

How do objects carry memory across space and time? How do they mediate loss and forgetting, exile and diaspora? More than props or exhibits of historical evidence, material objects are inscribed with the physical and affective traces of memorial transmission across cultures and generations. Looking at how objects mediate memory in familial and social life, and in public archives -- at how they are used, collected, exchanged, and exhibited -- this half-day workshop will explore, in particular, the gendering of familial transmission and the engendering of archives.

How do objects structure and gender family memory? What are the political and mnemonic stakes of taking them out of family archives and displaying them for public consumption -- whether in academic writing and publication, or in exhibition, projection, digitization, and performance -- and how does gender mediate this intersection? Might bringing such objects into the public archive and mining them for their testimonial value allow for more expansive histories and better representation of voices and narratives previously suppressed in official forms of remembrance? How might we widen our archives to include those intangible practices resistant to classification and archiving -- familial or group traditions, embodied practices and rituals, family lore, songs and anecdotes--that may belong to what Diana Taylor has termed "the repertoire?"

The afternoon workshop will consist of three roundtables with brief presentations focusing on individual objects and a broader discussion of their methodological and theoretical implications. A reception will follow.

Participants will include:

Lila Abu-Lughod, Professor of Anthropology and Women and Gender Studies, Columbia University;
Patricia Dailey, Assistant Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University;
Marianne Hirsch, Professor of English and Comparative Literature and Women and Gender Studies, Columbia University;
Andreas Huyssen, Villard Professor of German and Comparative Literature, Columbia University;
Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, University Professor and Professor of Performance Studies, New York University;
Nancy K. Miller, Distinguished Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the Graduate Center, CUNY;
Lorie Novak, Professor of Photography & Imaging, New York University;
Valerie Smith, Woodrow Wilson Professor of Literature and Director of the Program in African American Studies, Princeton University;
Silvia Spitta, Associate Professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Dartmouth College;
Leo Spitzer, Kathe Tappe Vernon Professor of History, Dartmouth College; and
Kate Stanley, PhD candidate in English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University

And Featuring Artist Presentations:

Lorie Novak, Reverb
Renata Stih and Frieder Schnock, Things Matter: Tracing Objects across Artistic Practice

No registration required.
For more information please contact Vina Tran at 212.854.3277 or email irwag@columbia.edu

Also, please visit the Cultural Memory Colloquium and the Department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University for more information.

Program

1:00-2:30pm

The Afterlife of Objects
Introduction: Sarah Cole

Nancy K. Miller, “Family Hair Looms”
Patricia Dailey, “Transmissions”
Marianne Hirsch & Leo Spitzer, “The Tile Stove: Embodied Memory, Touch, and Taste”

2:30-3:00pm

Renata Stih and Frieder Schnock
Things Matter: Tracing Objects across Artistic Practice
Introduction: Sonali Thakkar

3-3:15pm

Coffee break

3:15-4:30pm

Collections & Dispersions
Introduction: Susanne Knittel

Silvia Spitta, “The Importance of the European Wunderkammern in Modernity's Divide between Subject and Object”
Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, “Ring Once For Lurie”
Kate Stanley, “Fault-lines: A Fractured System of Objects”

4:30-4:45pm

Coffee break

4:45-6:00pm

Politics of the Private
Introduction: Joanna Scutts

Valerie Smith, “Emmett Till's Ring”
Lila Abu-Lughod, “In My Father’s Palestine: National Appropriations”
Andreas Huyssen, "Objects, Citation, and the Impasse of Memory"

6-6:30pm

Lorie Novak
Reverb
Introduction: Jennifer James

6:30-7:00pm

Concluding Discussion: Jennifer James and Sonali Thakkar

7:00pm

Reception

Abstracts, Images, and Links

The Afterlife of Objects
Introduction: Sarah Cole

Nancy K. Miller, “Family Hair Looms” Patricia Dailey, “Transmissions”
Marianne Hirsch & Leo Spitzer, “The Tile Stove: Embodied Memory, Touch, and Taste”
Things Matter: Tracing Objects across Artistic Practice
Introduction: Sonali Thakkar

Renata Stih and Frieder Schnock
Collections & Dispersions
Introduction: Susanne Knittel

Silvia Spitta, “The Importance of the European Wunderkammern in Modernity's Divide between Subject and Object” Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, “Ring Once For Lurie” Kate Stanley, “Fault-lines: A Fractured System of Objects” Politics of the Private
Introduction: Joanna Scutts

Valerie Smith, “Emmett Till's Ring” Lila Abu-Lughod, “In My Father’s Palestine: National Appropriations” Andreas Huyssen, "Objects, Citation, and the Impasse of Memory" Reverb
Introduction and Wrap-up: Jennifer James and Sonali Thakkar

Lorie Novak