Date: February 27, 2025
Time: 1:00pm – 4:00pm
Presenter: Kathryn Marshall Woods, PsyD
Where: (Hybrid Event)
The Textile Museum
701 21st St NW, Washington, DC 20052
and
Via Zoom
Registration Link: Here
Program Flyer: Here
Registration Deadline: February 25, 2025
Presentation Description:
This presentation will consider how racially crafted stereotypes located in literary and film works have permeated artistic mediums over the last century. Jefferson’s American Fiction depicts an esteemed scholar and novelist frustrated by the narratives published in the literary world that perpetuates racial stereotypes influencing the ways in which people of color are imagined and understood in the world. Within this presentation, racial stereotypes frequently depicted are examined understanding that their insidious residue exist within quotidian dynamics, including therapy rooms. This film carefully examines the roles artists and audiences have to uphold racial stereotypes within present day artistic expressions, while challenging one to consider how minority artists have contended with these stereotypes and navigated systems that depict their identity as the other. American Fiction directly confronts these systemically racially charged dynamics while being curious regarding whose voices and narratives are silenced and whose are celebrated.