- Feel Tank Chicago
Feel Tank Chicago is a
Chicago -based group composed of activists, artists, and academics that engages both in critical research and political activism. It originally began as a cell in larger project called Feminism Unfinished: the cell was called Public Feelings, and has grown in other locales as well, notably Austin TX and New York City. The group refers to itself as a feel tank rather than a think tank, only partly as a joke. Comprised of artists and academics, the feel tank is organized around the thought thatpublic sphere s are affect worlds at least as much as they are effects of rationality, rationalization, and institutions.The project studies theoretical, historical, and aesthetic materials engaged with political affects and emotions. They have focused on collecting the negative political emotions, arguing that many U.S. citizens and occupants have been left without optimism for the kind of transformative agency that might/ought to have been a provided by participation in the political public sphere. Among the emotions they're interested in are detachment, discontent, coolness, hopelessness, and ambivalence.
Their goal is to view these emotions not as a disconnection from politics, but as a particular critical perspective, and as a form of attachment, rather than detachment. They try to think about this perspective as an aesthetic perspective, without implying uplift, progress, or errancy. They describe themselves as "restless, angry, mournful, and strangely optimistic activists of the U.S. political sphere."
Its founders are
Lauren Berlant , an English professor at theUniversity of Chicago who focuses on publics and affects; Vanalyne Green, a professor in Fine Art at the University of Leeds; Debbie Gould, a sociologist of political feelings at the University of Pittsburgh; Mary Patten, a writer and video artist at the Art Institute of Chicago, and Rebecca Zorach, an art historian at the University of Chicago. Berlant narrates the origins and practices of Feel Tank Chicago briefly in her statement for the 2003Critical Inquiry symposium, titled [http://criticalinquiry.uchicago.edu/issues/v30/30n2.Berlant.html | "Critical Inquiry, Affirmative Culture,"] which was then included in the Winter 2004 issue of "Critical Inquiry".Feel Tank Chicago has organized three Annual International Parades of the Politically Depressed in Chicago (on May 1, 2003; May 1, 2004; and July 4, 2007). This event, which they describe as a "depress-in" (in the tradition of a
sit-in ), consists primarily of a demonstration. Those attending the demonstration were instructed to show up in their bathrobe and slippers, bring their meds, and also bring any legal form of self-medication they have. Their slogan for the event was "Depressed? It Might Be Political," which also adorns their t-shirts. They've also been involved in events at the "Depression: What is it Good For?" conference at the University of Chicago, Version 04 Festival, Pilot TV, and, in the summer of 2007, [http://www.pathogeographies.net |Pathogeographies, Or, Other People's Baggage] .Feel Tank Chicago is currently producing a political feelings Keywords project, part of a toolkit to help others start their own feeltanks. Follow links on the official website.
External links
* [http://feeltankchicago.net The official updated website]
* [http://feeltankchicago.blogspot.com A collective blog of the project, including posts by Lauren Berlant]
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