Reparative Histories of Art and Architecture
Summary In our fourth episode, Dr. Ana Ozaki (UPenn) joins us to discuss how she arrived at her method of "quilombo thinking" through her interdisciplinary studies in architecture and urban planning. Describing how that method has situated her to consider race in architectural analysis through a Black feminist historical lens, Dr. Ozaki examines how racism, sexism, and classism overlap. As communities comprised of fugitives and those outside the law, quilomboshave functioned as sites of active resistance even to the present day. Dr. Ozaki draws on these communities' histories to delineate ways of thinking that observe Brazilian architectural forms beyond their Portuguese colonial precedents. As a result, Ozaki's insights and critiques allow us to think critically about the ways that Brazilian and Atlantic histories have been told, which often center non-Black narratives in architecture especially. Guests Dr. Ana Ozaki [https://arth.sas.upenn.edu/people/ana-gisele-ozaki], Assistant Professor of Modern and Contemporary Architectural History, University of Pennsylvania. Trained as an architect in Brazil, she earned her Ph.D. in the History of Architecture and Urban Development from Cornell University and was the inaugural Mellon Race, Place and Equity Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Virginia School of Architecture. Her research investigates how racial ideologies have shaped architectural understandings of climate and environment across the Black Atlantic, with a focus on Brazil's connections to West and southern Africa. Amrita Vinod [https://www.haa.pitt.edu/people/amrita-vinod] is a Ph.D. Student in History of Art & Architecture, University of Pittsburgh focusing on the connected histories of architecture and landscapes in southern India and northern Sri Lanka. Host and Production Credits Co-Hosts: Sarah M. Estrela, Amelia Hansen Producer: Amelia Hansen Co-Editors: Amelia Hansen; Sarah M. Estrela Music: Jacob Napier Research Assistance and Show Notes: Allison Naydan Key Topics Discussed 00:03:28 – Dr. Ozaki describes architecture as a discipline that felt insufficient for the social, racial, and political questions she wanted to pursue, especially as a woman practicing in Brazil. She traces a path from undergraduate training in architecture and Fine Arts, to a double Master's in architecture and urban planning at the University of Cincinnati, to a Ph.D. in the history of architecture and urban development at Cornell. 00:11:50 — Dr. Ozaki describes a crisis during her graduate studies, when the transnational scope of her project required immense encouragement from her advisors and mentors. Ozaki credits this encouragement with sustaining what became quilombo thinking. 00:14:01 — Dr. Ozaki defines quilombo thinking as a methodology grounded in Black feminist theory, situated within what she calls the "Brazilian Atlantic" as a distinct diasporic formation, informed by Beatriz Nascimento's understanding of the quilombo as a living, ongoing way of being rather than a static, historical site. 00:20:40 — Dr. Ozaki pushes back against "post-racial" ideology, particularly Brazil's mythology of racial democracy as coined by Gilberto Freyre, drawing on Djamila Ribeiro's argument that anti-racism is a structural, rather than individual, responsibility. 00:24:30 — Dr. Ozaki places quilombo thinking alongside antropofagía as a specifically Brazilian disciplinary purchase with anti-colonial potential and reflects on the post-2020 institutional self-censorship she encountered when a proposed seminar was retitled. 00:28:33 — Dr. Ozaki discusses her contribution to the collaborative digital humanities project, "The World We Became: Map Quest 2350," specifically its quilombo and maroon mapping strand, organized around Christina Sharpe's framework of annotation and redaction as a practice of engaging archives. 00:36:00 — Dr. Ozaki frames social justice in architectural terms: architecture's historic complicity in racial and colonial regimes, and its structural role in producing and accumulating capital through the transformation of land and nature into property and commodity. 00:41:15 — Dr. Ozaki discusses expanding the concept of Blackness beyond the register of labor alone—thinking with Tiffany Lethabo King, Saidiya Hartman, and Sylvia Wynter, and situates the plantation and its afterlives within the ongoing climate crisis as a site of architectural complicity and potential intervention. 00:46:00 — Dr. Ozaki cites the Reconstructions: Architecture and Blackness in America exhibition and its Black Rconstruction Collective as a model of reparative intellectual labor in their distribution of honoraria and credits across the group. Ozaki names Anna Tsing's Feral Atlas as an example of collaborative digital work that resists academic incentive structures. Reading List Bibliographic entries below follow the notes-bibliography formatting conventions of the 18th edition of The Chicago Manual of Style, ordered alphabetically by author surname. Works Cited in Conversation Anderson, Sean, and Mabel O. Wilson, editors. Reconstructions: Architecture and Blackness in America. [https://www.artbook.com/9781633451148.html] New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2021. Freyre, Gilberto. The Masters and the Slaves [Casa-Grande e Senzala]: A Study in the Development of Brazilian Civilization. [https://archive.org/details/bub_gb_WYFFbVYEzvkC] Translated by Samuel Putnam. 2nd English-language edition. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986 [1933]. Goffe, Tao Leigh, et al. "The World We Became: Map Quest 2350, A Speculative Atlas Beyond Climate Crisis." [https://einaudi.cornell.edu/research/publications/world-we-became-map-quest-2350-speculative-atlas-beyond-climate-crisis] Asian Diasporic Visual Cultures and the Americas 7, no. 1–2 (2022): 5–49. Nascimento, Beatriz. "O conceito de quilombo e a resistência cultural negra [https://www.scribd.com/document/392505138/NASCIMENTO-Beatriz-O-Conceito-de-Quilombo-e-a-Resistencia-Cultural-Negra]." Afrodiáspora nos. 6–7 (1985): 49–64. Sharpe, Christina. In the Wake: On Blackness and Being. [https://www.dukeupress.edu/in-the-wake] Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2016. Tsing, Anna L., Jennifer Deger, Alder Keleman Saxena, and Feifei Zhou. Feral Atlas: The More-Than-Human Anthropocene. [https://feralatlas.org/index.html] Stanford University Press, 2020. Suggested Further Reading Deckker, Zilah Quezado. Brazil Built: The Architecture of the Modern Movement in Brazil [https://api.taylorfrancis.com/content/books/mono/download?identifierName=doi&identifierValue=10.4324/9781315011325&type=googlepdf]. London: Taylor & Francis, 2001. Gerber, Raquel, dir. Ôrí. [https://www.cultureunplugged.com/documentary/watch-online/play/54524/-r] Narrated by Beatriz Nascimento. Rio de Janeiro: Angra Filmes, 1989. 91 min. Hartman, Saidiya. Lose Your Mother: A Journey Along the Atlantic Slave Route [https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780374531157/loseyourmother/]. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2007. King, Tiffany Lethabo. The Black Shoals: Offshore Formations of Black and Native Studies [https://www.dukeupress.edu/the-black-shoals]. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2019. Nascimento, Abdias do. O genocídio do negro brasileiro: processo de um racism mascarado. São Paulo: Editora Perspectiva, 2016 [1978]. Nascimento, Beatriz. The Dialectic Is in the Sea: The Black Radical Thought of Beatriz Nascimento. [https://doi-org.pitt.idm.oclc.org/10.2307/jj.3079202.] Edited by Christen A. Smith, Bethânia N. F. Gomes, and Archie Davies. Princeton University Press, 2023. Nascimento, Beatriz. Uma história feita por mãos negras: relações raciais, quilombos e movimentos [https://www.companhiadasletras.com.br/livro/9786559790067/uma-historia-feita-por-maos-negras]. Alex Ratts, editor. Rio de Janeiro: Zahar, 2021. Ribeiro, Djamila. O que é lugar de fala? Belo Horizonte: Letramento/Justificando, 2017. Acknowledgments This podcast is made possible through the generous support of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation [https://www.mellon.org/], whose commitment to the humanities sustains the conditions under which scholarly conversations of this kind can be undertaken with care. We extend our deepest gratitude to the Mellon Foundation, to our guests for the generosity of their time and thinking, and to the institutional partners and communities whose collaboration anchors this work. Suggested Citation Estrela, Sarah M. and Amelia Hansen, co-hosts. "The Brazilian Atlantic with Dr. Ana Ozaki." Reparative Histories of Art and Architecture, episode 4, February 27, 2026, https://arthistories.libsyn.com/the-brazilian-atlantic-with-ana-ozaki [https://arthistories.libsyn.com/the-brazilian-atlantic-with-ana-ozaki]. Transcript and Contact For inquiries, corrections, or accessibility requests, please contact reparative.haa@pitt.edu [reparative.haa@pitt.edu].
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