Guest Lectures on May 29 and May 30, 2018
05/16/2018Michael Cohen (UC Berkeley): “America Has Made My Fortune: The Godfather and American Culture in the 1970s” and Leigh Raiford (UC Berkeley): “How to Represent Violence: Abstract Art and the Representation of Police Brutality”
Michael Cohen (UC Berkeley)
“America Has Made My Fortune: The Godfather and American Culture in the 1970s”
Tuesday, May 29, 14:15-15:45, Hörsaal 1 (Philosophiegebäude)
Michael Mark Cohen is Associate Teaching Professor of American Studies and African American Studies at the University of California at Berkeley. He received his Ph.D. from the American Studies department at Yale University in 2004. He is the author of the forthcoming book The Conspiracy of Capital: Law, Violence and American Popular Radicalism in the Age of Monopoly.
The film The Godfather will be screened by “Fachschaftsvertretung Philosophische Fakultät” on Monday, May 28 2018, 18:15, Hörsaal 2 (Philosophiegebäude)
Leigh Raiford (UC Berkeley)
“How to Represent Violence: Abstract Art and the Representation of Police Brutality”
Wednesday, May 30, 10:15-11:45, Room 18 (Philosophiegebäude)
Leigh Raiford is the author of Imprisoned in a Luminous Glare: Photography and the African American Freedom Struggle (University of North Carolina Press, 2011) and is co-editor with Heike Raphael-Hernandez of Migrating the Black Body: Visual Culture and the African Diaspora (University of Washington Press, 2017), and with Renee Romano of The Civil Rights Movement in American Memory (University of Georgia Press, 2006). Her work has appeared in numerous academic journals, including American Quarterly, Small Axe, and NKA: Journal of Contemporary African Art; edited collections including Dawoud Bey: Seeing Deeply (University of Texas Press, forthcoming 2018) and Only Skin Deep: Changing Visions of the American Self, (Harry N. Abrams Press, 2003), a history of race and photography in the United States; and news and popular outlets including Artforum, Aperture, Ms. Magazine and AlJazeera English online. She is an associate professor of African American Studies at University of California, Berkeley.