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The Undercommons: Fugitive Planning & Black Study
Stefano Harney,Fred Moten +1 more
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The article was published on 2013-05-01 and is currently open access. It has received 576 citations till now.read more
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The Visual Frequency of Black LifeLove, Labor, and the Practice of Refusal
TL;DR: In this article, the author explores the labor required by visual enactments of black precarity in the work of filmmaker and cinematographer Arthur Jafa, and concludes by expanding the discussion of Jafa's still-moving-images into a broader enunciation of hapticity, a term that articulates the labor of feeling across difference and suffering as an effortful practice of exertion and struggle to remain in relation to or in contact or connection with another.
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“Wages for Housework Means Wages against Heterosexuality”On the Archives of Black Women for Wages for Housework and Wages Due Lesbians
Beth Capper,Arlen Austin +1 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors highlight the tensions and coalitional possibilities that come to the fore in struggles against housework through the analytic and organizational centering of nonheteronormative socialities.
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Artificial vision, white space and racial surveillance capitalism.
TL;DR: The Eurodac digital fingerprint database created by the European Union to monitor and control asylum seekers and refugees is examined as an “artificial life system,” to use a phrase coined by its administrators.
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Affective ecologies: Braiding urban worlds in Darwin, Australia
TL;DR: In this article, the concept of affective ecologies or sentient embodiments of ecological interdependency grounded in everyday urban life is introduced and developed to entangle the worlds of entangled Indigenous and ethnic minority worlds in white settler cities.
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Dissolving Bologna: tensions between citizenship and the logistics city
TL;DR: The contemporary crisis of the nation-State’s paradigms lead to the resurgence of the city as a political space of action as discussed by the authors, however, the very concept of city itself is being profoundly reshaped...
References
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The witch's flight
TL;DR: Kara Keeling as discussed by the authors argued that cinema and cinematic processes had a profound significance for twenty-first-century anticapitalist Black Liberation movements based in the United States and argued that the cinematic structures racism, homophobia, and misogyny, and, in the process, denied viewers access to certain images and ways of knowing.
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"No Questions Asked" A Consideration of the Crime of Criminal Receiving
Duncan Chappell,Marilyn Walsh +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the criminal receiver and his crime stand out as sorely neglected by sociologists, psychologists, and criminologists, and the burgeoning rate of property theft with its need for the ready market of the receiver makes it clear that the fence has not shrunk before the social scientist's neglect.
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It's different
Michael Manfredi,Anne Rieselbach +1 more
TL;DR: The Architectural League Prize as mentioned in this paper is an annual competition, series of lectures, and exhibition organized by the American Institute of Architects and its Young Architects and Designers Committee to encourage the exchange of ideas among young people who might otherwise not have a forum in the U.S.A.