Prof. Dr. Katarzyna Marciniak, Ohio University
Date: April 8th, 2016 from 09:00-11:00 AM
Location: Room 27, Ground floor Neuphilologikum (Brechtbau), Wilhelmstr. 50
Abstract:
According to filmmaker Alex Rivera, we inhabit an era of ‘border disorder,’ witnessing tensions between, on the one hand, the intensification of media technology, mobility, and boundlessness and, on the other, the aggressive militarization of borders. We also witness the explosion of political mobilization by irregular migrants and pro-migrant activists. This presentation engages discourses of immigrant protest in various transnational films. My central concept is the ‘usability’ of the foreigner as a figure whose physical or emotional labor sustains the citizen, even as the foreigner herself is considered disposable. The interrelated ‘usability’ and ‘disposability’ of foreignness are symptomatic of the paradox of foreignness itself, as both xenophobia and xenophilia are mobilized in the service of a nation.
About:
Prof. Dr. Katarzyna Marciniak is Professor at the College of Arts & Sciences at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. Her research and teaching focuses on Transnational Feminist Media Studies. Her research interests include Cinema and Media of Exile and Displacement, Visual Culture, Ethnic and Racial Studies, Migration Studies, Discourses of Nationalism and Globalization, Women and Literature, Postsocialist Cultures, and Critical Pedagogy. She also is co-editor of Global Cinema. Her recently edited two books on Immigrant Protest: Politics, Aesthetics, and Everyday Dissent (2014) and Protesting Citizenship: Migrant Activisms (2014) together with Imogen Tyler.
Marciniak’s website