In Black and White: Race and American Visual Culture

Image
-

American Antiquarian Society
185 Salisbury Street
Worcester, MA 01609
United States

The 2017 CHAViC Summer Seminar will explore how American visual culture expressed ideas about race, specifically blackness and whiteness, across the long nineteenth century. Through lectures, readings, hands-on workshops, and group research, participants will learn how popular forms of visual culture have constructed racial identities in the United States and how looking can function as a racialized practice.

Participants will have the opportunity to learn from the extraordinary collections at the AAS, including popular prints, political cartoons, photographs, illustrated books and periodicals, sheet music, and ephemera. Case studies may include: caricatures of African Americans in Edward Clay’s lithographic series Life in Philadelphia (1828-1830), the visual culture of blackface minstrelsy and Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852), graphics from popular periodicals like Harper’s Weekly that picture racial politics at key moments in US history, efforts to recreate the “image of the black” by African American writer Phillis Wheatley and abolitionist Frederick Douglass, fantasies of racial difference in illustrated children’s books and commercial trade cards, and efforts to visualize raced bodies in early photographic portraiture.

Faculty

The seminar leader will be Tanya Sheehan, Associate Professor, Art Department, Colby College and Editor, Archives of American Art Journal, Smithsonian Institution.

Guest faculty will include Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor, Assistant Professor, History Department, Smith College and Jasmine Nichole Cobb, Assistant Professor, Department of African & American Studies, Duke University.

Seminar Leader