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Symptoms and Submergence: A Media History of Shipwrecks
Manage episode 294405726 series 2321083
In this talk I attempt an intimate and immersive story of the meanings of indentured labor, plantation capitalism and mediated life through a focus on shipwrecks. Some of the most enduring mythographies of tropical islands derive from an 18th century French romance novel, Bernardin de Saint-Pierre’s Paul et Virginie (1787). It describes the idyllic childhood of two white European children who grow up in Mauritius and tragically perish in a shipwreck. Drawing on this story and its spin-offs, I consider a cultural and mediatic history of shipwrecks and the material things that spill out from them. Paper, wood, oil, metal, flesh, and bone; each of these things carries media histories of meaning-making be it as carriers of human cargo (wooden ships), instruments of commercial exchange and colonial bureaucracy (paper currency, paperwork), or as inscriptions of racial, gendered, and caste violence (drowned bodies). From such a vantage point, when the bulk carrier ship MV Wakashio ran aground off the coast of Mauritius in July 2020 it allowed a momentary flash of historical and cultural insight into the entanglements of imagined islands, colonial trade routes, neo-imperial commodity traffic, and the lives of fish, coral, and islandic humans. My methods in this talk are inspired by what might be called the diagnostic logics of cultural theory as practiced by Siegfried Kracauer and Walter Benjamin, with their pursuit of symptoms and surfaces.
Debashree Mukherjee is Assistant Professor of film and media in the Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies at Columbia University in New York. Her first book, Bombay Hustle: Making Movies in a Colonial City approaches cinema as a history of material practice and practitioners. Her next project presents a media history of indenture and South-South migrations, spanning photography, communications infrastructures, and film traffic. Debashree edits the peer-reviewed journal BioScope: South Asian Screen Studies and has published in journals such as Film History and Feminist Media Histories.
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Manage episode 294405726 series 2321083
In this talk I attempt an intimate and immersive story of the meanings of indentured labor, plantation capitalism and mediated life through a focus on shipwrecks. Some of the most enduring mythographies of tropical islands derive from an 18th century French romance novel, Bernardin de Saint-Pierre’s Paul et Virginie (1787). It describes the idyllic childhood of two white European children who grow up in Mauritius and tragically perish in a shipwreck. Drawing on this story and its spin-offs, I consider a cultural and mediatic history of shipwrecks and the material things that spill out from them. Paper, wood, oil, metal, flesh, and bone; each of these things carries media histories of meaning-making be it as carriers of human cargo (wooden ships), instruments of commercial exchange and colonial bureaucracy (paper currency, paperwork), or as inscriptions of racial, gendered, and caste violence (drowned bodies). From such a vantage point, when the bulk carrier ship MV Wakashio ran aground off the coast of Mauritius in July 2020 it allowed a momentary flash of historical and cultural insight into the entanglements of imagined islands, colonial trade routes, neo-imperial commodity traffic, and the lives of fish, coral, and islandic humans. My methods in this talk are inspired by what might be called the diagnostic logics of cultural theory as practiced by Siegfried Kracauer and Walter Benjamin, with their pursuit of symptoms and surfaces.
Debashree Mukherjee is Assistant Professor of film and media in the Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies at Columbia University in New York. Her first book, Bombay Hustle: Making Movies in a Colonial City approaches cinema as a history of material practice and practitioners. Her next project presents a media history of indenture and South-South migrations, spanning photography, communications infrastructures, and film traffic. Debashree edits the peer-reviewed journal BioScope: South Asian Screen Studies and has published in journals such as Film History and Feminist Media Histories.
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