The Daddy Function: Brown Fascists and the New Phallocracy

When and Where

Thursday, September 12, 2024 1:30 pm to 5:00 pm
Victoria College 304
91 Charles St. West, third floor

Speakers

Lázaro Lima

Description

We are delighted to welcome professor Lázaro Lima for a visit to our department. Please join us for an invited lecture on the rise of the U.S. Brown (Latinx / Latinaé) far right's commitment to structural whiteness.

About the Presentation
All relationships to daddy are organized around labor. The “daddy function” describes the process through which elite capture renders labor as the antecedent and the wellspring for both material and affective security. But what exactly are the racialized and gendered attachments to a longed-for security premised on daddy’s ever elusive and always belated embrace? This talk analyzes this dynamic within contemporary North American political cultures and, more specifically, within the rise of the U.S. Brown (Latinx/Latinaé) far right’s commitment to structural whiteness. This commitment to affiliative whiteness is enacted through a dynamic of racial dominance that is constitutively misogynistic in its laboring toward what Marx called, in another context, “Arbeit sans phrase,” or labor without speech (Grundrisse). The lecture ultimately proposes that understanding the daddy function is the necessary starting point for breaking the democratization of dominance that is at the heart of the new phallocracy.

About the Presenter
Dr. Lázaro Lima ​is Chair of the Department of Africana, Puerto Rican and Latino Studies and Professor of Latinx Studies at Hunter College, CUNY. His teaching and research analyzes how Latinx cultural, intellectual, and political histories intersect with the discourses of democratic rights, historical memory, and the commons. As an interdisciplinary scholar, he studies how ethnic and racialized public identities are experienced individually, understood collectively, and represented across cultural industries and political communities. His scholarship is fundamentally informed by American Studies methodologies, literary and visual cultural studies, race and ethnic studies, decolonial aesthetics, as well as gender and sexuality studies.

Professor Lima’s books include Being Brown: Sonia Sotomayor and the Latino Question (U of California Press, 2019), Ambientes: New Queer Latino Writing, with Felice Picano (U of Wisconsin Press,  2011), and The Latino Body: Crisis Identities in American Literary and Cultural Memory ​(NYU Press, 2007). His work has appeared in popular media, edited volumes, and academic journals including American Literary History, The Journal of Transnational American StudiesRevista IberoamericanaThe Wallace Stevens JournalA Corracorriente, and many other journals and public humanities outlets. He currently serve on the board of The Journal of Transnational American Studies.

As a filmmaker, he has served as the co-writer and executive producer of the documentary film Rubí: A DACA Dreamer in Trump’s America (Deronda Productions, 2020) which appeared on PBS and was awarded a BEA “On-Location Documentary Award of Excellence.” His films have been showcased at the Smithsonian Museum of American History’s Warner Brothers Theater, PBS, the National Association for Chicana and Chicano Studies, the Latino Studies Association, Fem Flicks and other venues. He is the founder of The Black and Latinx Sensorium Lab, a multimedia experimental and experiential space for the study of the Brown and Black commons through democracy’s sensoria.

Professor Lima has also received grants and awards from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the American Library Association, and many other institutions. He is currently the Principal Investigator for the project “Black and Latinx Practices of Freedom: Methods, Archives, Pedagogies” (2022-2023), funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s “Black Race and Ethnic Studies Initiative” (BRESI) at CUNY. His website can be found at lazarolima.com

 

Please note: to register, please select the button at the top right corner, under the title of this lecture.

Sponsors

Department of Spanish & Portuguese, Latin American Studies program, Centre for Comparative Literature

Map

91 Charles St. West, third floor