2- Racialized Landscapes of Becoming: Kanye West and The History of White Wyoming Wide-Open Spaces - Matthew DelCiampo, Texas A&M University
Quand:
1:30 PM, Vendredi 24 Mai 2019
(2 heures)
Pauses:
Pause café 03:30 PM à 04:00 PM (30 minutes)
Où:
Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) -
DS-1520
Comment:
In 2018, Kanye West held a
listening party for his new album, Ye,
at a ranch outside of Jackson, Wyoming. Within the location’s idyllic landscape
and flanked by the stoic Teton Mountains, a mostly Brown and Black guest list
of hip-hop musicians, celebrities, industry executives, and journalists gathered
to listen. In the following days, the ranch’s white co-owner, Jane Golliher, objected
to the late start and noise of the event. She told a reporter that there would
be “no more rappers” at the ranch in the future and suggested the issues she
encountered may have stemmed from the guests being from “California and L.A.” Golliher’s
statements about the listening party generated an immediate conversation
concerning the racialization of both sound and the landscape among popular
media contributors and consumers. The connection she drew between cities and
the hip hop community continues a history of racially linking musical
production to specific geographic areas by ghettoizing communities of color to
urban areas and simultaneously excluding them from the rural, wide-open spaces like
those of the ranch. In this presentation, I examine the listening party in
relation to the racialized understanding of western United States landscapes and
the presumed access to such spaces shared among many white Americans. I argue
that the continued construction of whiteness in language and in sound does
double duty to license white Americans to lay claim to western landscapes while
positioning nonwhite peoples as intrusive and transgressive of the “sonic color
line” (Stoever 2016).