
The Art Of Emergency Charts The Maneuvers Of Art Through Conflict Zones Across The African Continent. Advancing Diverse Models For Artistic And Humanitarian Alliance, The Volume Urges Conscientious Deliberation On The Role Of Aesthetics In Crisis Through Intellectual Engagement, Artistic Innovation, And Administrative Policy. Across Africa, Artists Increasingly Turn To Ngo Sponsorship In Pursuit Of Greater Influence And Funding, While Simultaneously Ngos-both International And Local-commission Arts Projects To Buttress Their Interventions And Achieve Greater Reach And Marketability. The Key Values Of Artistic Expression Thus Become Healing And Sensitization, Measured In Turn By Impact And Effectiveness. Such Rubrics Obscure The Aesthetic Complexities Of The Artworks And The Power Dynamics That Inform Their Production. Clashes Arise As Foreign Ngos Import Foreign Aesthetic Models And Preconceptions About Their Efficacy, Alongside Foreign Interpretations Of Politics, Medicine, Psychology, Trauma, Memorialization, And So On. Meanwhile, Each Community Embraces Its Own Aesthetic Precedents, Often At Odds With The Intentions Of Humanitarian Agencies. The Arts Are A Sphere In Which Different Worldviews Enter Into Conflict And Conversation. To Tackle The Consequences Of Aid Agency Arts Deployment, Volume Editors Samuel Mark Anderson And Chérie Rivers Ndaliko Assemble Ten Case Studies From Across The African Continent Employing Multiple Media Including Music, Sculpture, Photography, Drama, Storytelling, Ritual, And Protest Marches. Organized Under Three Widespread Yet Under-analyzed Objectives For Arts In Emergency-demonstration, Distribution, And Remediation-each Case Offers A Different Disciplinary And Methodological Perspective On A Common Complication In Ngo-sponsored Creativity. By Shifting The Discourse On Arts Activism Away From Fixations On Message And Toward Diverse Investigations Of Aesthetics And Power Negotiations, The Art Of Emergency Brings Into Focus The Consc
This volume investigates the complex intersection of artistic production and humanitarian intervention within conflict zones across the African continent. Editors Chérie Rivers Ndaliko and Samuel Mark Anderson draw upon their expertise in cultural studies and anthropology to analyze how NGO-sponsored arts projects often clash with local aesthetic traditions. The authors argue that current humanitarian frameworks frequently prioritize impact and marketability over the nuanced power dynamics and aesthetic integrity of the works produced.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and practitioners in the fields of development and cultural studies identify this work as a critical intervention in the discourse surrounding aid-funded creativity. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a rigorous examination of the power imbalances inherent in international humanitarian arts deployment.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190692340
ISBN-13:
9780190692346
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