Belonging and Un-belonging in the English Countryside Symposium

8 videos • 226 views • by MK Gallery About this event: Thursday 2 May 2019 Curated by Paul Gilroy, Cora Gilroy Ware and Ingrid Pollard Programmed to complement The Lie of the Land, this daylong symposium will use performance, intergenerational conversation and deep listening to explore exclusion and the English countryside. First exhibited in 1987, Ingrid Pollard’s series Pastoral Interlude ushered a wave of reflections on the exclusion of black people from the English countryside. Now, over thirty years later, what, if anything, has changed? Do the marginalised people who traverse footpaths and bridleways still grapple with the threat of violence? Are they still subject to the same degree of scrutiny by those they encounter? Have emergent patterns of immigration and the vitriolic debates they bring forth redistributed the experience of exclusion? Is it enough to be included? Should we strive for something else? Looking back in time reveals that black artists before Pollard, particularly the neglected archive of folk musicians from migrant backgrounds, found ways of transcending the dilemma of exclusion through their practices. As concepts like ‘tradition’, ‘identity’ and ‘way of life’ continue to be abused to further a mainstreamed far-right politics, their legacies provide a means of enriching our understanding of how the desire to belong and the blocking of that desire has figured and continues to figure in the enjoyment of the English countryside.