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Call and Response-ability: Black Canadian Works of Art and the Politics of Relation [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 516 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 19 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0228027780
  • ISBN-13: 9780228027782
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 516 pages, kõrgus x laius: 229x152 mm, 19 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 16-Jun-2026
  • Kirjastus: McGill-Queen's University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0228027780
  • ISBN-13: 9780228027782
Sound demands a listener, text requires a reader, and performance necessitates that others be present for the experience. Without those presences, the circuit isnt complete, the charge will not travel through, the work will not become active in the world. These words by Kaie Kellough articulate the central idea explored in Call and Response-ability: that Black Canadian works of art cannot be understood apart from the foundational concerns of audience and reception.

A richly collaborative assemblage of artist statements, scholarly essays, critical analyses, and reflections, these writings explore what happens when Black Canadian cultural productions and interventions enter the realms of public, institutional, and pedagogical reception. Part 1 foregrounds the voices of word, sound, and visual artists, who reflect on audience during and after the creative process. Part 2, anchored by M. NourbeSe Philips signature essay Whos Listening? Artists, Audience & Language, gathers fourteen critical inquiries into writing, theatre, visual art, and sonic practice. Part 3 turns to pedagogy, with reflections on the field and narrated syllabi that can inspire readers, discussion groups, and practitioners alike. A concluding coda considers the ethics of relation, the practice of communal research, and the limits of the archive.

This book is an indispensable resource for anyone working with Black Canadian literature, music, visual art, and theatre. Its blend of personal reflection, critical insight, and pedagogical practice also makes it valuable to general readers and community-based audiences seeking to understand how Black Canadian art speaks and how we might learn to listen.

Arvustused

Call and Response-ability is a stunning achievement and an invaluable contribution to the archive of Black Canadian literature and art. Offering a set of fresh, honest, provocative reflections, the book illuminates Black art as a deeply relational practice. It is a call to attunement to a different kind of sound and storytelling, an invitation to listen and listen well. - Andrea Davis, author of Horizon, Sea, Sound: Caribbean and African Womens Cultural Critiques of Nation

Figuresxi
Acknowledgmentsxiii

Introduction3
WINFRIED SIEMERLING AND KARINA VERNON

Part One Artists on Audience

1 All That Grooving45
LILLIAN ALLEN

2 Writing Is a Social Act48
WAYDE COMPTON

3 Receiver?51
KAIE KELLOUGH

4 Wolves and Jellyfish: Inside Flipping Outside Flipping Inside56
SUZETTE MAYR

5 Notes on Audience60
SYLVIA D. HAMILTON

6 World Making, Truth Telling, and the Work of a Poet65
JULIANE OKOT BITEK

Part Two Writing and Theatre

7 Whos Listening? Artists, Audiences & Language71
M. NOURBESE PHILIP

8 M. NourbeSe Philips Antiphonal Poetics88
KYLE KINASCHUK

9 Teachable Moments: Invitations to Thinking and Community in Cheryl Foggos
Pourin Down Rain and David Chariandys Brother112
LAUREANNE WILLEMS

10 Radically Reconfigured Spaces and Relations: Reading Radical Intimacy
in David Chariandys Brother133
VALERIE UHER

11 Volumes of Ambivalence: An Exploration of Market Aesthetics and Canadas
Literary Mainstream in David Chariandys Brother154
JP MONGEAU

12 The Tragedy of Black Citizenship? Reading George Elliott Clarkes
Execution Poems and George & Rue177
KATJA SARKOWSKY

13 Canadian Theatre Made for Black Women197
NAILA KELETA-MAE

14 Evidence we were here: Reflections on Black Canadian Theatre and
Audience217
DJANET SEARS AND SIGNY LYNCH

Part Three Visual and Sonic Art

15 The Street Poetics of #BlackLivesMatter-Toronto231
TAVLEEN PUREWAL

16 Contrast and Share: Reading Black Lives in Black Photojournalism in 1970s
Multicultural Toronto254
CHERYL THOMPSON

17 Imaging Otherwise: Ella Coopers Photo-Video Art278
HANNAH GARDINER

18 From Site/Sight to Sound and Film: Critical Black Canadian Memory Culture
and Sylvia D. Hamiltons The Little Black School House290
WINFRIED SIEMERLING

19 Turntable Poetry, Mixed-Race, and Schizophonophilia306
WAYDE COMPTON

20 Rhythms Riddims of Relation319
MARK V. CAMPBELL

Part Four Teaching Black Canadian Works of Art

21 Reading and Listening to Black Canadian Literature: My Route337
LESLIE SANDERS

22 Introduction to the Syllabus: Black Literatures and Cultures in
Canada348
DARCY BALLANTYNE

23 This Part of the Country: Teaching Archives of Black Prairie Freedom
and Futures360
CORNEL BOGLE, COURTENAY CHAN, MIRIAM MABROUK, JUMOKE VERISSIMO, AND TERESA
ZACKODNIK

24 Reading and Listening Intently to David Chariandys Brother on the Prairie
Campus375
JOANNE LEOW

25 Canadian Literature Through and Beyond the Black Atlantic390
JENNIFER BLAIR

26 Hemispheric Approaches to Black Canadian Literatures408
MAANDEEQ MOHAMED

27 The Outside of the Inside: Blackness and the Remaking of Canadian
Institutional Life414
KARINA VERNON

28 Teaching (Black) Canadian Literature in the Netherlands424
HANS BAK, JOCHEM RIESTHUIS, AND JEANETTE DEN TOONDER

Coda433
KARINA VERNON AND WINFRIED SIEMERLING

References441
Contributors471
Index479
Karina Vernon (Editor) Karina Vernon is associate professor of English at the University of Toronto, Scarborough.

Winfried Siemerling (Editor) Winfried Siemerling is professor of English at the University of Waterloo, an associate of the W.E.B. Du Bois Research Institute at Harvard University, and co-editor of Canada and Its Americas: Transnational Navigations.