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Formations Programme

10 Oct 2020

October 2020 – September 2021

The Postcolonial Studies Centre at Nottingham Trent University (NTU) and Bonington Gallery is pleased to present Formations, a year-long programme of events in response to Black History Month, Black Lives Matter, and the Decolonisation agenda.

NTU’s Postcolonial Studies Centre invites the public to enjoy a year of events which focus on Black History, Literature, Art, and Critical Thinking as central to global creative and intellectual work. The series begins in October 2020 with a month of events led by artists, writers, theorists and students which critically consider the place and impact of Black History Month. The subsequent yearlong programme is accompanied by commissioned work by artist Honey Williams, which will be launched at the end of October with a special event, and displayed in Bonington Gallery. Themed events running throughout the year are prompted by themes or objects and are centrally concerned with making visible the centrality of Black artists and thinkers, and the patterns and materials that connect global creative and intellectual histories.

The series is developed by the Postcolonial Studies Centre at NTU and directed by Dr Jenni Ramone and Dr Nicole Thiara.

Jenni Ramone is Senior Lecturer in Postcolonial Studies at NTU. Her recent book publications include Postcolonial Literatures in the Local Literary Marketplace: Located Reading, The Bloomsbury Introduction to Postcolonial WritingPostcolonial Theories, and Salman Rushdie and Translation. Jenni Ramone specializes in global and postcolonial literatures and the literary marketplace. She is pursuing new projects on Global Literature and Gender, and on literature and maternity.

Nicole Thiara is Principal Investigator on the AHRC-funded Research Network Series Writing, Analysing, Translating Dalit Literature(2014-16) and On Page and on Stage: Celebrating Dalit and Adivasi Literatures and Performing Arts (2020-21). She teaches postcolonial and contemporary literature, and her areas of research are Dalit, Adivasi and diasporic South Asian literature.

Programme


October 2020

Formation: History — Critical Responses to Black History Month


November – December 2020

Formation: Land — Dispossession, Agriculture, Place


January – February 2021

Formation: Memorials — The Place and Meaning of Memorials, Statues, and Renowned Figures


March – April 2021

Formation: DNA — Identity, Care, Inequality, Disease, and Vaccination


May – June 2021

Formation: Milk — Global Practices and Representations of Breastfeeding in Art and Literature


June 2021

Conference: Patterns of Struggle and Solidarity


July – August 2021

Formation: Lace — The Global History of Lace and its use in Colonial Contexts


September 2021

Formation: Re-Viewing — A look back on the 2020-21 Formations Programme