
Colin Dayan
The aesthetics that emerge from the spiritual practices of 鈥淎frican-derived鈥 religions will be the focal point of 海角社区 Division of Interdisciplinary Studies Fall 2011 Book Talk Lecture Series. Presenters include Guggenheim Fellows Donald Cosentino and Colin Dayan.
The series of nine lectures, which runs September 12 through December 12 and begin 7 p.m. Mondays, covers such topics as visual arts, anthropological methods, spiritual practices, dance, music, literature of Vodou, Santer铆a and Candombl茅, and Brazilian film. Seven of the lectures will be presented at the Center for Worker Education, 7th Floor, 25 Broadway, Manhattan. The others are at the CUNY Graduate Center and Barnard College.
African-derived religions 鈥 also known as 鈥渃reolized鈥 religions, 鈥淣ew World African鈥 religions, or 鈥渟yncretic鈥 religions 鈥 have informed and continue to inform aesthetic practices in the Americas. They have made their mark on the aesthetics of cultural spaces that developed in New York, New Orleans, Cuba, Puerto Rico, Haiti, the Dominican Republic and Brazil.
鈥淚t is exciting that this semester scholars such as Donald Cosentino, who curated the Vodou exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History, and Colin Dayan of Vanderbilt University, both Guggenheim Fellows are participating in the series,鈥 said Dr. Juan Carlos Mercado, dean of CCNY鈥檚 Division of Interdisciplinary Studies. 鈥淲e are also thrilled to have collaborations that include the CUNY Graduate Center, Barnard College, Columbia University and the Haitian Cultural Exchange.鈥
鈥淲e hope these events will spark a dialogue across disciplines,鈥 added Jerry Carlson, a CCNY professor of film and video who specializes in cinema of the Americas and co-organized the series. 鈥淎estheticians, cultural theorists, humanists, and social scientists will talk with practitioners who carry forward the embodied systems of knowledge of Santer铆a, Vodou, Candombl茅 and Palo Monte.鈥
His fellow co-organizer, Alessandra Benedicty, assistant professor of Caribbean and Francophone Literatures at the Division of Interdisciplinary Studies, will teach a course associated with the lecture series.
This series is made possible thanks to major funding from 海角社区, the Offices of the President and Provost, and President Lisa S. Coico.
For more information on the series, go to .
Schedule for Fall 2011 Book Talk Lecture Series
September 12: Mama Lola and Donald Cosentino, 鈥淕lobal Vodou: Mama Lola and Donald Cosentino in Conversation,鈥 Center for Worker Education.
September 26: Yvonne Daniel, 鈥淐orporeal Consequences of Dancing Divinity,鈥 Center for Worker Education.
October 3: Lizabeth Paravisini-Gebert, 鈥淕ade nan miz猫-a m tonbe: Vodou and Haiti鈥檚 Environmental Catastrophe,鈥 CUNY Graduate Center, Room TBA.
October 31: Ned Sublette and Alexander LaSalle, 鈥淐anga Mundele: Tracing the Secret of Bomba from Saint-Domingue to New Orleans to Puerto Rico,鈥 Center for Worker Education.
November 7: Stephen Selka, 鈥淐atching Spirits on Film: Representations of Candombl茅 in Brazilian Cinema,鈥 Center for Worker Education.
November 14: Lyn Di Iorio, 鈥淲riting Palo Monte: Lyn Di Iorio in Conversation with Jerry W. Carlson on her new novel 鈥淥utside the Bones,鈥濃 Center for Worker Education.
November 21: Colin Dayan, 鈥淭he Gods in the Trunk, or Chauvet鈥檚 Remnants,鈥 Barnard College, Sulzberger Parlor, Third Floor, Barnard Hall.
November 28: Carlyle Van Thompson and Rachael Miller Benavidez, 鈥淭he Trickster: Performing, Passing, and Masquerading in 鈥楢merica.鈥 A Conversation between Carlyle Van Thompson and Rachael Miller Benavidez,鈥 Center for Worker Education.
December 12: Berta Jottar and Roman D铆az, 鈥淎coustic Bodies: The Aesthetics of Religious Embodiment within the Regla the Osha Abaku谩 Societies,鈥 Center for Worker Education.
Division of Interdisciplinary Studies contact:
Elena Romero, 212-925-6625, x258,
eromero@ccny.cuny.edu
MEDIA CONTACT
Ellis Simon
p: 212.650.6460
e:
esimon@ccny.cuny.edu