Unravelling Text: Reading as a Polyphonic Practice

Lead Research Organisation: Glasgow School of Art
Department Name: Research & Enterprise

Abstract

Within traditional Western scholarship, the practice of reading is generally perceived as a solitaryintellectual pursuit and the practice of critique considered a form of analysis based on judgement,hierarchization and refutation. This supposedly neutral image of the solitary scholar and the stringentregulations of Western scholarship have been formed through the colonial, patriarchal and classist historyof the academy. Inspired by current urgent decolonial and feminist discussions embracing multiple ways ofknowing and in conversation with the work of black feminist scholars such as Jennifer Nash, Amber JamillaMusser and Saidiya Hartman, my research will investigate the complexities of reading and critique asmaterial, social practices.The outcome of my project will be a new practice-as-research methodology for decolonial and feministcritique, grounded in what I call an expanded literacy. If literacy in its most basic sense is the ability to readand write, then an expanded literacy is one that enables the literate to read and write multimodally.Drawing on this expanded literacy, the methodology will be developed through embroidery andprintmaking practices built upon the foundations of my existing citational practice of 'Stitch Theory', whichinvolves reading, extracting, devotionally embroidering and gifting quotations from scholarly texts.Following this thread, I will explore the imbrication of the supposedly domestic and gestural practice ofembroidery and the purportedly public and static practice of printmaking. Through my engagement withthese media I will elucidate how the circulation of scholarly thought is informed by material conditions andthe perception of those materialities. The creation of the methodology will be advanced through a series ofparticipatory workshops and interventions, allowing me to generate research material and challenge thechronically entrenched colonial and patriarchal conception of text as a fixed, linear object.

Publications

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