comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Department of english at michigan state university - Page 1 : comparemela.com

Broad Underground Film Series: Accidental Athletes

The Broad Underground Film Series presents experimental and avant-garde film and video screenings programmed in response to exhibitions at the MSU Broad Art Museum.

CAS Lecture Series: Looking Under: New Archival Readings of Kimpa Vita

Kinitra Brooks is the Audrey and John Leslie Endowed Chair in Literary Studies in the Department of English at Michigan State University. Her current research focuses on portrayals of the Conjure Woman throughout history and in contemporary popular culture. She has co-edited The Lemonade Reader (Routledge 2019), an interdisciplinary collection that explores the nuances of

Ask the expert: How does Black horror help us understand cultural anxieties?

Thou Shalt Not Suffer a Witch to Live: Dona Kimpa Vita, Foremother of Conjure Feminism

With Dr. Kintra Brooks, the Audrey and John Leslie Endowed Chair in Literary Studies in the Department of English at Michigan State University Conjure Feminism is an epistemic framework rooted in the U.S. Black South with an intellectual history that can be traced from West Central Africa. It is a spiritual practice developed by enslaved Black women and sustained by their descendants. Yet its roots can be traced back to the Catholic Kongolese Kingdom of the 18th-Century in which there arose Dona Beatriz Kimpa Vita, leader of a religious and political movement, Antonianism. Dona Kimpa Vita was possessed by the spirit of St. Anthony and led tens of thousands in revising and subverting Roman Catholicism bending it to Indigenous Kongolese religious practices. Vita was eventually burned as a heretic by the Kongolese monarchy at the behest of the Capuchin monks. This talk will connect how the spiritually grounded and politically powerful Antonine movement provided a theological example of Co

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.