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(ORIGINAL)Feel Tanks as Method : Why we
(Image is speaker's own created in homage to Tammy Rae Carland's Lesbian Beds (2002) series

Public Feelings Goldsmiths: Feel Tank #4 Irritation

Feel Tank with Ceramics workshop by @maeceramics

Goldsmiths College, UoL

28th June 2018

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‘Feel Tanks’ (a spin of ‘think tank’) derive their name from one cell of a larger group known as the Public Feelings Project which operated from the conviction that ‘understanding affective investment can be the a starting point for theoretical insight into the workings of capitalism, racism and sexism within power structures.’ (Cvetkovich, 2012)

Through over a fifteen workshops, seminars and lectures in the UK and internationally, Chloe Turner has been using ‘Feel Tanks’ as both intellectual enquiry and call-to-arms, to consider how to sustain living under capitalism in the current moment. 

In the continuing struggles against global anti-Black, queer/transphobic conservative governance, pandemic "new normal“ living and the stripping of arts and humanities funding, nurturing spaces of care and connection have never felt more pressing. How do we bring into being the feminist space we want to be a part of? A space where we gift our labour to each other as opposed to institutions, co-create the
spaces to weather the coming disasters and mobilise a resistance that centres pleasure and joy.

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Public Feelings Goldsmiths: Feel Tank #4 Irritation & @maeceramics 

The upcoming discussion will work around feelings associated with irritation and potential for a politics of 'feminist irritation'.

I designed and ran this Feel Tank as the final workshop of Public Feelings Goldsmiths Series, Centre for Feminist Research. The Mae Ceramics workshop was kindly funded by Building Academic Communities Fund, Goldsmiths College UoL.

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