What is the racial logic behind the history of ornament? How do the decorative arts, often seen as frivolous, become a heated site of contestation over human value?
Distinguished author and Professor of English Anne A. Cheng will trace a centuries-long conflation in the Euro-American imagination between porcelain—one of the early global commodities of transpacific desire and exchange—and Asiatic femininity. She will discuss how this merging of “thingliness” and “woman” serves as a fulcrum from which we can begin to understand how the specter of the “yellow woman” animates the romance of pastness and fuels the designs of futurity, how this ghostly figure jeopardizes the distinction between the human and the inhuman so foundational to the dream of modernity.
A reception will follow the lecture.
LATE THURSDAYS! This event is part of the Museum’s Late Thursdays programming, made possible in part by Heather and Paul G. Haaga Jr., Class of 1970.
Distinguished author and Professor of English Anne A. Cheng will trace a centuries-long conflation in the Euro-American imagination between porcelain—one of the early global commodities of transpacific desire and exchange—and Asiatic femininity. She will discuss how this merging of “thingliness” and “woman” serves as a fulcrum from which we can begin to understand how the specter of the “yellow woman” animates the romance of pastness and fuels the designs of futurity, how this ghostly figure jeopardizes the distinction between the human and the inhuman so foundational to the dream of modernity.
A reception will follow the lecture.
LATE THURSDAYS! This event is part of the Museum’s Late Thursdays programming, made possible in part by Heather and Paul G. Haaga Jr., Class of 1970.
University programs and activities are open to all eligible participants without regard to identity or other protected characteristics. Sponsorship of an event does not constitute institutional endorsement of external speakers or views presented.