(Un)Making: Keynote Lecture by Mel Y. Chen

(Un)Making: Keynote Lecture by Mel Y. Chen

Join us for Professor Mel Y. Chen's keynote lecture on the topic of (Un)Making!

Date and time

Friday, April 5 · 5:15 - 6:45pm EDT

Location

19 West 4th Street

19 West 4th Street Room 101 New York, NY 10012

About this event

Location:19 W 4th St. - Room 101

5:15 pm Doors Open

5:30 pm Keynote Lecture Starts

Mel Y. Chen (they/them+) is Professor of Gender & Women's Studies and Director for the Center for the Study of Sexual Culture at the University of California, Berkeley as well as Director of the Disability Studies Minor. Mel is also an affiliate of the Center for Race and Gender, the Institute for Cognitive and Behavioral Science, the Center for Science, Technology, Medicine, and Society, and the Haas Disability Studies and LGBTQ Citizenship Research Clusters. Previously, they served as Robert Sterling Clark Visiting Professor of Art History at Williams College, and the Matthiessen Visiting Professor of Gender and Sexuality at Harvard University. Their training spans the humanities, social sciences, and sciences, with a doctorate degree in linguistics that they transitioned to from computer engineering. Their 2012 book, Animacies: Biopolitics, Racial Mattering, and Queer Affect (Duke UP, which won the MLA GL/Q Caucus Alan Bray Award), explores questions of racialization, gender, queering, disability, and affective economies in animate and inanimate “life” through the extended concept of animacy. Following on Animacies: Biopolitics, Racial Mattering, and Queer Affect (Duke, 2012), their second monograph titled Intoxicated: Race, Disability and Chemical Intimacies of Empire as well as a coedited collection with Alison Kafer and Eunjung Kim, Crip Genealogies, were published at Duke in 2023. They are now working on a trade book/project titled It, a series of drawings, music, and essays on the strange turns and also surprising connections in a journey through trans*, racial, and migrant inhumanisms.

Their writing on the racialization and transing of pollution, cognitive disability and method, trans media, gender pronouns and linguistics, and more can be found in Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies, Transgender Studies Quarterly, Discourse, Women in Performance, Australian Feminist Studies, Signs, Medical Humanities, South Atlantic Quarterly, and GLQ, as well as a number of arts catalogues (2022 Venice Biennale, 2021 Shanghai Biennale, Candice Lin, New Time, Lin May Saeed) and scholarly anthologies such as the Handbook of Language and Sexuality, Meat!, and Unwatchable. Chen coedits a Duke University Press book series entitled “Anima,” highlighting scholarship in critical race and disability post/in/humanisms. They are also part of a small and sustaining queer/trans of color arts collective in the SF Bay Area, and have shown work in “The Story of Our Lives: QTPOC Portraits by QTPOC Artists,” curated by Ajuan Mance at Strut!, San Francisco (2019-2020) and contributed two illustrations to Love Liberates: A Trans POC Coloring Book, a collaboration between the trans-queer arts project Peacock Rebellion and People of Coloring (2020).

To RSVP to (Un)Making: CRS's Grad Student Conference click here.

NYU Tisch School of the Arts provides reasonable accommodations to people with disabilities. Requests for accommodations should be made at least two weeks before the date of the event when possible. Request disability accommodations here.

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