Black Body is a harsh and compelling meditation on the contradictory values assigned to black bodies in American culture: they exist as both desired and feared, abject and powerful. The “black body” is a body whose surface reflects projected fears and repressed desires; as such, it exists as a site of ideological struggle, a surface which is simultaneously eroticized and denegrated. With nightmarish narratives and loaded terms hovering over an image of a naked torso bound with wire, Harris shows how these contradictory values continue to cripple and contort the self-image of blacks. The video conveys a powerful sense of confusion and trauma, the problem of inhabiting a body that is a cultural taboo.
Black Body
Thomas Allen Harris
1992 00:05:00 United StatesEnglishColorStereoDescription
About Thomas Allen Harris
Thomas Allen Harris is an artist, filmmaker and scholar whose work across film, video, photography, and performance illuminates the human condition and the search for identity, family, and spirituality. His mythopoetic films include "Through a Lens Darkly: Black Photographers and the Emergence of a People" (2014) and "Twelve Disciples of Nelson Mandela: A Son's Tribute to Unsung Heroes" (2005). In 2009, Harris founded Digital Diaspora Family Reunion, LLC (DDFR) a socially engaged transmedia project that incorporates community organizing, performance, virtual gathering spaces, and storytelling into unique audio-visual events in over 75 cities in North and South America and Africa. The project culminated in the critically acclaimed PBS series Family Pictures USA as well as the creation of the Family Pictures Institute for Inclusive storytelling which uses the family album as a vehicle to connect people across difference. Harris is currently in production on My Mom, The Scientist, a documentary examining the relationship between art, science and spirituality. He is a Professor in the Practice at Yale University in African American Studies and Film & Media Studies.