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Barnard’s Online Journal Examines Public Reactions to Trauma in Tribute to September 11th

New York, N.Y.— The unexpected and violent trauma of September 11, 2001, has produced an outpouring of public emotion, which Barnard College’s Scholar & Feminist Online journal examines in a special double issue this month that explores how artists and writers interpret the meaning of September 11th through writing and visual and performance art.

The multimedia web journal, www.barnard.edu/sfonline, contains 21 essays and performances by such renowned artists as Anna Deavere Smith and Sarah Jones, as well as photos, video, and dialogues that capture emotion, preserve history and sometimes revive testimony. The issue is guest-edited by authors Ann Cvetkovich and Ann Pellegrini, both of whom have written extensively about public trauma.

"The issue brings to light the ways emotional responses to trauma can be both deeply personal and also part of our public culture," notes Deborah Siegel, co-editor with Janet Jakobsen of the multimedia journal. "Our hope," says Jakobsen, "is that readers will be prompted to explore how public sentiments can be important in the processes of building a more just, less violent world."

The essays are divided into three interconnected themes: September 11th, other historical traumatic events, and art as a form of expressing public sentiment. The essays address questions like:

  • What are the implications of public trauma?
  • What can we learn from the study of public emotion and trauma in other times and places?
  • How does art address public feelings?

The Scholar & Feminist Online September 11th tribute issue will be accompanied by a panel discussion, "Reflecting on 9/11" on Wednesday, September 10, at 7 p.m. in the James Room, Barnard Hall at West 117th Street and Broadway.

The panel will feature Cvetkovich and other contributors and examine what types of public policies are the outcome of September 11th. The panelists will also discuss how the arts and performances can contribute to alternative, less violent futures.

Part One of the issue, "Archives of Trauma," draws its content from the February 2002 Scholar and Feminist Conference at Barnard, which explored the topic of "Memory, Trauma, History, Action," with panelists Marianne Hirsch, Nieves Ayress, and Ann Cvetkovich, all of whom have contributed into this issue with essays on violence and trauma, September 11th, AIDS, and political torture, among other topics. Other contributors include Peter Lucas on September 11th; Anne Cubilié and Margaret McLagan on human rights; Roger Hallas on alternative ways of documenting AIDS; and media artists Jane Rosett and Jean Carlomusto on "living archive."

Part Two, "Performance Works," asks how performances can generate different kinds of public emotion. The contributors examine the ways performers, teachers, and activists solicit feelings from their audiences in an attempt to "move" them. The first cluster, "Audience Making: Affect & Effect", highlights the work of artists Anna Deavere Smith and Sarah Jones, who use testimony and oral history as the basis for their performances. The second cluster, "World Making: Performance and Cultural Formation," features essays by theatre artist and psychoanalyst Steven Reisner on trauma and drama, and essayists Rachel Lee, Daphne Lei, Judith Halberstam, and Janelle Reinelt on theatre and live performance. The essays in the final cluster, "Feeling Public," document feelings that are part of everyday life and contextualize dramatic events such as September 11th by juxtaposing them with ordinary scenes of emotion. The contributors include Rebecca Schneider, Alyssa Harad, Kathleen Stewart, Sharon Holland, and Jason Tougaw.

The special issue editors Cvetkovich and Pellegrini have both studied the issues of public emotion and drama. In her recent book, An Archive of Feelings: Trauma, Sexuality, and Lesbian Public Cultures, Cvetkovich explores national and public drama by analyzing daily lives of lesbians and gays as they face homophobia, racism, and sexism. Pellegrini’s book Performance Anxieties, Staging, Psychoanalysis, Staging Race works "in between" selected psychoanalytic texts and specific theatrical performance, among them Deavere Smith’s Fires in the Mirror.

For more information about the Scholar and Feminist Online or the panel discussion, call 212.854.2067 or visit www.barnard.edu/bcrw. The event is free and open to the public.

Contact: Petra Tuomi, Barnard Office of Public Affairs, 212-854-7907, Ptuomi@barnard.edu

 

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