“Here Lies the Possibility of Bodies Turning Elemental”:

This paper explores the (non)representational aesthetics and politics of Serpent Rain, a 2016 Black feminist film inspired by the recovery of a Danish-Norwegian slave ship. Despite ample historical evidence, Scandinavia’s involvement in the transatlantic slave trade remains an underdiscussed topic;...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jenny Andrine Madsen Evang
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: The Royal Danish Library 2025-01-01
Series:Kvinder, Køn & Forskning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/KKF/article/view/144008
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832590367513378816
author Jenny Andrine Madsen Evang
author_facet Jenny Andrine Madsen Evang
author_sort Jenny Andrine Madsen Evang
collection DOAJ
description This paper explores the (non)representational aesthetics and politics of Serpent Rain, a 2016 Black feminist film inspired by the recovery of a Danish-Norwegian slave ship. Despite ample historical evidence, Scandinavia’s involvement in the transatlantic slave trade remains an underdiscussed topic; when the history is broached at all, it tends to be relegated to a distant ‘dark chapter’ already overcome. I argue that Serpent Rain rejects this binary of erasure vs. contained representation in its treatment of slavery, enacting instead another type of (non)representation that moves beyond “the limits of most available narratives to explain the position of the enslaved” (Hartman and Wilderson 2023, 184). Taking its meandering and associative form from Serpent Rain’s experimental aesthetics, this article draws on Black feminist theory—particularly Christina Sharpe’s In the Wake—to argue that the film unsettles visual and ontological certainty to dramatize the repetitive structure of racial capitalism and its ongoing reiterative violence, from the sunken slave ship to the ongoing extraction of oil on indigenous land. Ultimately, the film makes us question not only the hegemonic mediation of the enslaved, but also the orthography of the (white) Human and the seeming serenity of Norwegian oceanic landscapes.  
format Article
id doaj-art-f3ebde3caf5046e3a22617e23ccadbb6
institution Kabale University
issn 2245-6937
language Danish
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher The Royal Danish Library
record_format Article
series Kvinder, Køn & Forskning
spelling doaj-art-f3ebde3caf5046e3a22617e23ccadbb62025-01-24T01:03:19ZdanThe Royal Danish LibraryKvinder, Køn & Forskning2245-69372025-01-0137210.7146/kkf.v37i2.144008“Here Lies the Possibility of Bodies Turning Elemental”:Jenny Andrine Madsen Evang0Stanford UniversityThis paper explores the (non)representational aesthetics and politics of Serpent Rain, a 2016 Black feminist film inspired by the recovery of a Danish-Norwegian slave ship. Despite ample historical evidence, Scandinavia’s involvement in the transatlantic slave trade remains an underdiscussed topic; when the history is broached at all, it tends to be relegated to a distant ‘dark chapter’ already overcome. I argue that Serpent Rain rejects this binary of erasure vs. contained representation in its treatment of slavery, enacting instead another type of (non)representation that moves beyond “the limits of most available narratives to explain the position of the enslaved” (Hartman and Wilderson 2023, 184). Taking its meandering and associative form from Serpent Rain’s experimental aesthetics, this article draws on Black feminist theory—particularly Christina Sharpe’s In the Wake—to argue that the film unsettles visual and ontological certainty to dramatize the repetitive structure of racial capitalism and its ongoing reiterative violence, from the sunken slave ship to the ongoing extraction of oil on indigenous land. Ultimately, the film makes us question not only the hegemonic mediation of the enslaved, but also the orthography of the (white) Human and the seeming serenity of Norwegian oceanic landscapes.   https://tidsskrift.dk/KKF/article/view/144008Nordic Exceptionalismthe SonicSlow Cinema(Anti)humanismTemporalityBlack Feminism
spellingShingle Jenny Andrine Madsen Evang
“Here Lies the Possibility of Bodies Turning Elemental”:
Kvinder, Køn & Forskning
Nordic Exceptionalism
the Sonic
Slow Cinema
(Anti)humanism
Temporality
Black Feminism
title “Here Lies the Possibility of Bodies Turning Elemental”:
title_full “Here Lies the Possibility of Bodies Turning Elemental”:
title_fullStr “Here Lies the Possibility of Bodies Turning Elemental”:
title_full_unstemmed “Here Lies the Possibility of Bodies Turning Elemental”:
title_short “Here Lies the Possibility of Bodies Turning Elemental”:
title_sort here lies the possibility of bodies turning elemental
topic Nordic Exceptionalism
the Sonic
Slow Cinema
(Anti)humanism
Temporality
Black Feminism
url https://tidsskrift.dk/KKF/article/view/144008
work_keys_str_mv AT jennyandrinemadsenevang hereliesthepossibilityofbodiesturningelemental