SciELO - Scientific Electronic Library Online

 
vol.23 issue1Visual arts and feminisms: pedagogical implicationsAt the margins of a globalized artivism: on the borders of Mujeres Al Borde author indexsubject indexarticles search
Home Pagealphabetic serial listing  

Services on Demand

Journal

Article

Share


Revista Estudos Feministas

Print version ISSN 0104-026XOn-line version ISSN 1806-9584

Abstract

AVILA, Eliana de Souza. "From high-tech to Aztec": Chronoqueer Decolonization in Feminist Chicana Art. Rev. Estud. Fem. [online]. 2015, vol.23, n.1, pp.191-206. ISSN 1806-9584.  https://doi.org/10.1590/0104-026X2015v23n1p191.

This article contextualizes chicana cyberart in the decolonial conception of the region of Aztlán, confirming clearly that "Latin America is not entirely in the territory which carries its name" (CANCLINI, 2008). This 'territorial' appropriation is also temporal: it is performative of decolonial temporality as it dethrones the colonialist regime of chrononormativity which disqualifies non-eurocentric epistemes by mapping them onto the past. Specifically, the article addresses how chicana cyberart decolonizes temporality by refusing the transcendentalist or post-social version of the cyborg narrative. Discussing specific ways in which chicana cyberart queers the chrononormative prescription of the future as high technology over the past as its low-tech residue, the article affirms Afrofuturism's broader conception of technology (which acknowledges its residue as its own suppressed supplement) as an effective threat to the chronic biopolitics of straight temporality.

Keywords : Decolonial Art; Queer; Chrononormativity; Cyborg; Chicana Cyberart.

        · abstract in Portuguese     · text in Portuguese     · Portuguese ( pdf )