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"ART, ARCHIVE, OPERA AND THE PURGE": WILLIAM KENTRIDGE IN CONVERSATION WITH DAVID LEVIN

  • 501 Schermerhorn Hall (map)

From Gogol's short story of a body divided against itself, and the archive of Stalin's purges, comes William Kentridge's magical restaging of Shostakovich's opera, 'The Nose.' Kentridge, one of the world's foremost artists, is joined by opera scholar and dramaturgue David Levin to discuss his visual investigation of anarchism and anomie, power and its excesses.

This event is being held in conjunction with Professor Rosalind Morris's class, 'Cultures of Accusation' (Comparative Literature and Anthropology, CLAN 4143), and is cosponsored by the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society, and the Engendering Archives Project of the Center for the Critical Analysis of Social Difference.

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March 2

Tina Campt - "Family Touches: Black Germans and the Sight and Sense of Race"

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March 30

Jill Bennett - "Affective Aesthetics: Compassion, Resentment and the Emotional Life of Imagery"