Mississippi
Articles tagged with Mississippi
Tag Archive
- acting
- african
- Amílcar Cabral
- angolan literature
- apartheid
- Artafrica
- Bab Cepta
- Batida
- Berlin
- Berlin Biennale
- biden
- biografia
- biography
- Black body
- Boubacar Boris Diop
- Bruno Pereira
- Cabo Verde
- casas
- Central African Museum at Teruvren
- Cheryl Dunye
- choreography
- cinema indígena
- circulação de saberes
- collect the work of black artists
- communities
- cotton or oil
- cultural memory
- Cultural Programming
- culture programme
- decolonial studies
- decolonising
- departures
- descolinizar museus
- Dulce Fernandes
- Earth
- epistemologia
- equal rights
- Euridice Kala
- Exhibition-Fair Angola 1938
- fim
- Fuck'ing Globo
- future
- game
- Gegé Mbakudi
- geographies
- govern
- government
- hospitalidade
- Ilha de Santiago
- Iwalewahaus –
- Jimmie Durham
- João de Deus Lopes da Silva
- Jorge Barbosa
- Joseph Gai Ramaka
- Kenya
- Looking After Freedom?
- Maria Vlachou
- material heritage
- memórias
- migrations
- militant cinema
- Mississippi
- mulher
- My Kaaba is HUMAN
- mythology
- Namibe
- Negro. mulheres
- Neo-Colonization
- New Encyclopedia of Africa
- nicknames
- O que temos a ver com isto? O papel político das organizações culturais
- our lady of the chinese shop
- palestina
- pan African & arts festival
- pandemia
- patera
- Paul Theroux
- pintura
- post-coloniality
- post-memory
- Postmemory
- pscianálise
- Raoul Peck
- rurality
- Ruy Guerra
- Sao Tomé et Príncipe
- São Vicente
- satire
- sculpture
- sello pesa
- soldiers
- theater
- Trinidad
- Uma Biografia”
- Viriato da Cruz
- Walter Salles
- welket bungué
- Western civilization
- William Shatner e Amílcar Cabral
- women
 What if we accounted for all labor that was put in the development of those lands, both human, and non-human, the living, the inert, and the not-yet-lived, would this then lead us to a new understanding of its environment and its constitution as a disappearing geological strata in flux? Can we interpret how the energetic metabolism speculated around the Mississippi is withholding processes of land recuperation and human health, while privileging forms of dissolved property?
				What if we accounted for all labor that was put in the development of those lands, both human, and non-human, the living, the inert, and the not-yet-lived, would this then lead us to a new understanding of its environment and its constitution as a disappearing geological strata in flux? Can we interpret how the energetic metabolism speculated around the Mississippi is withholding processes of land recuperation and human health, while privileging forms of dissolved property?		



