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Ann Cvetkovich: An Interview

Video Data Bank

2016 01:04:00 United StatesEnglishColorStereo16:9HD video

Description

Ann Cvetkovich is the Ellen Clayton Garwood Centennial Professor of English and Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of Texas at Austin.  She is the author of a number of books and works also with documentary film, memoirs, music and dance performances, and visual art. Her work focuses on feminist and queer theory, affect and feeling, trauma, theories of the archive and oral history.

In this discussion, Cvetkovich traces the origins of her interest in emotion and its relation to art back to her undergraduate studies in philosophy and literature. She talks about moving towards thinking of the mind and body as inseparable and the “politics of producing an attunement to the sensations and feelings in the body that are the tools for creating other ways of being together that aren’t so regulated or dominated by conventional ideologies.”  The inevitable topic of the current political atmosphere is analyzed in terms of a “public culture of feeling.”  Cvetkovich discusses her book “An Archive of Feelings,” which investigates and develops a queer approach to trauma, arguing for recognizing and “archiving” the ordinary and chronic everyday accounts of trauma that are not be noticed as overt catastrophe.

Ann Cvetkovich is interviewed by Shawn Michelle Smith, Professor of Visual and Critical Studies at the School of the Art Insitute of Chicago.

The Video Data Bank is the leading resource in the United States for videotapes by and about contemporary artists. The VDB collection features innovative video work made by artists from an aesthetic, political or personal point of view. The collection includes seminal works that, seen as a whole, describe the development of video as an art form originating in the late 1960's and continuing to the present. Works in the collection employ innovative uses of form and technology, mixed with original visual style to address contemporary art and cultural themes.

Founded in 1976 at the inception of the media arts movement in the United States, the Video Data Bank is one of the nation's largest providers of alternative and art-based video. Through a successful national and international distribution service, the VDB distributes video art, documentaries made by artists, and recorded interviews with visual artists, photographers and critics.