Decolonizing the Arts

Knowledge producers of Romani ethnicity, like the people to whom they belong, both inside and outside normative frameworks governing development modes and the transmission of knowledge, are hampered profoundly by three fundamental ethical credentials of being: the power to say, the power to act, an...

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Main Author: Sarah Carmona
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Romani Studies Program at Central European University 2018-12-01
Series:Critical Romani Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://crs.ceu.edu/index.php/crs/article/view/22
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spelling doaj-b62d2dec0c164438a327153b0cb5cbab2020-11-25T01:07:59ZengRomani Studies Program at Central European UniversityCritical Romani Studies2560-30192630-855X2018-12-011210.29098/crs.v1i2.2222Decolonizing the ArtsSarah Carmona0Université de Corse Pascal Paoli Knowledge producers of Romani ethnicity, like the people to whom they belong, both inside and outside normative frameworks governing development modes and the transmission of knowledge, are hampered profoundly by three fundamental ethical credentials of being: the power to say, the power to act, and the power to collect their own lives into a comprehensible and acceptable story. Due to an historical process of epistemological alienation which appeared with the Enlightenment, it has been impossible for Romani subjects to have as their duty, their responsibility to the world, the power to act. Through a “Foucauldian archaeology” on Romani iconography in the Louvre and Prado collections, and using as a methodological presupposition historical and epistemological decolonial thought, this paper will try to advance the understanding of the genealogy of abnormativity by referring to the study of the Romani motif in the arts. The analysis of the pictographic treatment allows us to understand how those “topoi” responded to religious, ethical-moral, and geopolitical imperatives of majority society in a dialectic that oscillates between formal presence and ontological absence from the fifteenth to nineteenth centuries. The arrival of the Roma in fifteenth-century Europe, in full epistemological caesura, between a dying hermeneutic age and the age of the nascent cogito, conditions a radical change in the consideration of Romani alterity. Indeed, this alteration of the Romani alterity experience by mainstream societies constitutes a paradigmatic example of epistemicidiary structural dynamics and idiomicidiaries born of the slime of “historical modernity”. https://crs.ceu.edu/index.php/crs/article/view/22Epistemology of artRomani iconographyRomani historyDecolonialityAlterity and exteriorityLouvre museum
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah Carmona
spellingShingle Sarah Carmona
Decolonizing the Arts
Critical Romani Studies
Epistemology of art
Romani iconography
Romani history
Decoloniality
Alterity and exteriority
Louvre museum
author_facet Sarah Carmona
author_sort Sarah Carmona
title Decolonizing the Arts
title_short Decolonizing the Arts
title_full Decolonizing the Arts
title_fullStr Decolonizing the Arts
title_full_unstemmed Decolonizing the Arts
title_sort decolonizing the arts
publisher Romani Studies Program at Central European University
series Critical Romani Studies
issn 2560-3019
2630-855X
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Knowledge producers of Romani ethnicity, like the people to whom they belong, both inside and outside normative frameworks governing development modes and the transmission of knowledge, are hampered profoundly by three fundamental ethical credentials of being: the power to say, the power to act, and the power to collect their own lives into a comprehensible and acceptable story. Due to an historical process of epistemological alienation which appeared with the Enlightenment, it has been impossible for Romani subjects to have as their duty, their responsibility to the world, the power to act. Through a “Foucauldian archaeology” on Romani iconography in the Louvre and Prado collections, and using as a methodological presupposition historical and epistemological decolonial thought, this paper will try to advance the understanding of the genealogy of abnormativity by referring to the study of the Romani motif in the arts. The analysis of the pictographic treatment allows us to understand how those “topoi” responded to religious, ethical-moral, and geopolitical imperatives of majority society in a dialectic that oscillates between formal presence and ontological absence from the fifteenth to nineteenth centuries. The arrival of the Roma in fifteenth-century Europe, in full epistemological caesura, between a dying hermeneutic age and the age of the nascent cogito, conditions a radical change in the consideration of Romani alterity. Indeed, this alteration of the Romani alterity experience by mainstream societies constitutes a paradigmatic example of epistemicidiary structural dynamics and idiomicidiaries born of the slime of “historical modernity”.
topic Epistemology of art
Romani iconography
Romani history
Decoloniality
Alterity and exteriority
Louvre museum
url https://crs.ceu.edu/index.php/crs/article/view/22
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