Standing with Myanmar
In: Critical times: interventions in global critical theory, Volume 7, Issue 3, p. 377-401
Abstract
Abstract
Since the military coup in Myanmar on February 1, 2021, South Korean artists and exhibit makers have tapped into the power of art activism to support the Burmese struggle for democracy. This essay pays special attention to two of the earliest exhibitions held in Gwangju, a southwestern hub in the peninsula that since May 1980 has been widely been known as a site of civil resistance. With a focus on each show's narrative and audience engagement in relation to the historic meaning of Gwangju, this essay considers the limits of transnational solidarity imagined through art activism, revealing solidarities that reinforce either the nation-state as primary in defining political subjectivity or the universalist humanism at their core. Although these shows allow the empathic positioning of artists to a certain degree, their activism does not necessarily provide meaningful means of building south-south partnership.
Citations
We have found one citation for you at OpenAlex.
We have found citations for you at OpenAlex.
References
We have found one reference for you at OpenAlex.
We have found references for you at OpenAlex.
Report Issue