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- Title
Resurrecting the Black body: Race and the digital afterlife.
- Authors
Fletcher, Akil
- Abstract
"Resurrecting the Black Body: Race and the Digital Afterlife" by Tonia Sutherland explores the intersection of Black death and evolving technology. The book examines how the Black body has been used posthumously to advance fields and entertain audiences, such as through the proliferation of recorded police murders of Black individuals and the resurrection of famous Black artists as holograms. Sutherland also delves into the power of memory and the ways in which technology has transformed the concept of living and dying. The author proposes two theoretical interventions, the "right to be forgotten" and the "right to be remembered," to address the ethical dilemmas posed by technology's impact on memory. Sutherland's work challenges Western archival practices and calls for new ways of remembering individuals. Overall, the book offers a thought-provoking exploration of race, technology, memory, and the meaning of existence.
- Subjects
RACE; AFTERLIFE; RIGHT to be forgotten; BLACK artists
- Publication
Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 2024, Vol 38, Issue 2, p243
- ISSN
0745-5194
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/maq.12845