EDUCATORS: Bring Black and Cuba into your classroom with Cedric J. Robinson’s Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical Tradition today! Integrate it easily into your classroom with our complete syllabus guide based on Black and Cuba!
The Grapevine
Invisibility Blues: Help Open Up The Conversation About Race In Games
Call for Applications for the Luminary Residency. Deadline: September 1st, 2015
Simeon Solomon, Infamous Jewish Pre-Raphaelite
On the 14th of August 1905, English Pre-Raphaelite painter Simeon Solomon died in London. He is famous for his dreamy paintings with subjects which often included scenes from the Hebrew Bible and genre paintings depicting Jewish life and rituals. Infamously, in 1873, at the age of 32, his career was cut short when he was arrested in a public urinal at Stratford Place Mews, off Oxford Street, in London and charged with attempting to commit sodomy. “He was tried and condemned to eighteen months’ imprisonment with light labour, later commuted to six weeks in the Clerkenwell House of Correction and a £100 fine, for ‘gross indecency’. Unlike Oscar Wilde twenty years later, who managed to maintain a public presence despite the infamy, Solomon was eclipsed by this judgment, even though it attracted no press attention. His closest friends, including Rossetti and Swinburne, ostracised him, and he lived…
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Black and Cuba Scene Study: Monument to the Maroons
Director Dr. Robin J. Hayes discusses the historical and cultural significance of the Monument to the Maroons.
Want to learn more? Click HERE to watch Black and Cuba in full, or check out BlackandCuba.org if you are an educator looking to screen the film at your institution.
Archive Materials: Feminism, Performance and Art History in the UK
Writing Feminist Art Histories
We are very pleased to announce a one day research symposium at the University of St Andrews on 7 October 2015. Archive Materials will adopt an expanded notion of the archive as a starting point to address the long history of feminist art and art history production in the UK. Building on the rich array of recent scholarship focussing on feminist art of the 1970s and 1980s, our discussion will look back to include significant eighteenth, nineteenth, and early twentieth century precedents. Confirmed speakers include: Prof Hilary Robinson, Freya Gowrley, and Rachel Rose Smith, with more to be announced very soon.
Further information, including booking details: Archive Materials Announcement.
This event was kindly supported by the Paul Mellon Centre for British Art, and has been organised by Catherine Spencer (St Andrews) and Victoria Horne (Edinburgh).
When A Brown Actor Plays A White Character, Who Really Wins?
San Francisco State University John & Marcia Goldman Chair in American Jewish Studies
Race and Ethnic Studies Funding Opportunities
Deadline: September 30
Length: Tenure-track
Comments: To be filled “at the level of tenure-track assistant professor.” “The department will consider applications from scholars in a wide array of disciplines, including (but not limited to) anthropology, art history, cultural studies, education, ethics, history, literature, media studies, modern Jewish thought, philosophy, political science, religious studies, sociology, and women’s/gender studies.”
The Jewish Ghetto and Photonostalgia: Roman Vishniac’s Vanished World
On the 19th of August 1897, one of the world’s most remarkable microbiologists and naturalist photographers, Roman Vishniac was born in Pavlovsk, the Russian Empire. Within the art world, however, he is best remembered for his photojournalistic coverage of the Eastern European Jewish ghettos prior to World War II. In the late 1930s, Vishniac was commissioned by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) to photograph the Jewish poor of Eastern Europe. Out of the sixteen thousand photographs he managed to take, only two thousand survived. Most of them have been published several times in book form as Polish Jews (1947), A Vanished World (1969), and To Give Them Light(1992).
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California Institute of the Arts Faculty Position in Contemporary Art Theory
Race and Ethnic Studies Funding Opportunities
Deadline: October 1
Length: Unstated
Comments: “The School of Critical Studies at the California Institute of the Arts. . . invite[s] applications for a full-time faculty position in contemporary art theory, with an emphasis on political thought. Approaches that foreground race and gender are particularly welcome.”

