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引用次数: 0
摘要
在这篇文章中,我研究了两幅画——《大婴儿巴兰》和《丹扎·奥塞洛特》——如何代表了墨西哥人/美国人具体化开垦的潜力。通过这些绘画,艺术家Yreina D. Cervántez将她的身体定位为非殖民化的场所,我将其描述为具体化的开垦过程。通过将她的身体去殖民化,并将她的身体定位为一个去殖民化的场所,Cervántez将身体代表为一个被殖民化并可以被回收的物理和物质位置。这篇文章扩展了非殖民化理论来讨论具体化的开垦,它将身体重新定义为开垦而不是殖民的物理场所。我关注的是这些画作所表现的与具象化身份的角力,由此我呼吁更多探索“身份艺术”的作品,将其作为一种自我创造的策略,在特定的身体被他人和野蛮对待的环境中。
Embodied reclamation: how Big Baby Balam and Danza Ocelotl represent the body as a site for decolonization
In this article, I investigate how two paintings—Big Baby Balam and Danza Ocelotl—represent the potential for embodied reclamation for Chicanas/os. Through these paintings, the artist Yreina D. Cervántez situates her body as a site for decolonization through a process which I describe as embodied reclamation. In decolonizing her body and situating her body as a site for decolonization, Cervántez represents the body as a physical and material location that was colonized and can be reclaimed. This article extends decolonial theories to discuss embodied reclamation, which reconceptualizes the body as a physical site for reclamation rather than colonization. I am looking at the way these paintings represent a wrestling with embodied identity, and from that I call for more work exploring the “art of identity” as a strategy of self-making in contexts where particular bodies are Othered and brutalized.