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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:New Directions in Art History: “The Chinese Lady” and the Black Atlantic
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SUMMARY:New Directions in Art History: “The Chinese Lady” and the Black Atlantic
DESCRIPTION:<p>	<drupal-media data-entity-type="media" data-entity-uuid="097e6381-c354-464b-ace0-7a8be2a7979d" alt="NDAH 2023 Poster 1" data-view-mode="hwp_full_width"></drupal-media></p><p style="margin-top:0px;margin-bottom:0px">	 </p><p style="margin-top:0px;margin-bottom:0px">	<span><span style="line-height:14.4px"><span style="caret-color:#000000"><span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span>Over the course of the 1830s and 1840s, a young woman known by the name of </span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span>Afong</span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span> Moy traveled along eastern seaboard and the Gulf of Mexico, alighting in cities including New York, New Orleans, Mobile, and Havana. </span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span>Known to publics as “the Chinese lady,” </span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span>Moy had been brought from Guangzhou to the United States by white American merchants, who put her on display </span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span>to promote their</span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span> traveling exhibition</span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span> of Chinese export art and wares. This paper considers </span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span>how these exhibitions unfolded in relation to matters of racial formation and racial capitalism in the Black Atlantic before the abolition of slavery. </span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span>In so doing</span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span> it</span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span> ultimately</span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span> seeks to understand</span></span> <span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span>how the racialization and objectification of Moy as “Chinese lady” was not incidental</span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span>to</span></span><span class="s2" style="line-height:14.4px"><span> but rather inseparable from understandings of race, labor, and unfreedom that shaped both African and Asian diasporas in the Atlantic world. </span></span></span></span></span></span></p><p style="margin-top:0px;margin-bottom:0px">	 </p><p>	 </p>
LOCATION:485 Broadway Lower Lecture Hall
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20231011T220000Z
DTEND:20231011T230000Z
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