Abstract

In Seven American Deaths and Disasters (2013), Kenneth Goldsmith recounted a set of tragic and unanticipated events in recent American history by using transcriptions of radio and TV broadcasts, usually from minor networks. Designed to be an “eighthAmerican disaster,” Goldsmith presented The Body of Michael Brown, a performance based on the St. Louis autopsy report at the “Interrupt 3” conference at Brown University(13 March 2015), eliciting widespread criticism and controversy. Seemingly very different from Goldsmith—Sophie Calle’s projects, for the past few decades, set up particularprocedural processes that raise pressing epistemological questions, especially about the nature of relationships, personal and political. One of her recent projects, Prenez soin de vous (Take Care of Yourself) that was based on her installation for the Venice Biennale in 2007, comprises comments by 107 women on an email that Calle received from her then lover. In this project, Calle uses the “real” words of others to create a montage of possible interpretations of the discourse that confronts us in our daily lives. For Calle, as for Goldsmith, the most troubling gap is that between information and knowledge, while the issue, that a conceptual poetics can take as a premise, is that the body most difficult to getinside of turns out to be one’s own.

Highlights

  • Seven American Deaths and Disasters, Kenneth Goldsmith’s 2013 recounting of a set of tragic and unanticipated events in recent American history —the assassinations, first of John and of Robert Kennedy, the murder of John Lennon, the space shuttle

  • Kennedy; it is about the way the media disseminate ‘the facts’ about a wholly unanticipated and cataclysmic event like the Kennedy assassination

  • A long ad for Armour Star Turkey and Falstaff beer is punctuated by pop songs with lines like this: (Boom-sh-boom) http://epublishing.ekt.gr | e-Publisher: EKT | Downloaded at 08/11/2021 16:00:32 |

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Summary

Introduction

Seven American Deaths and Disasters, Kenneth Goldsmith’s 2013 recounting of a set of tragic and unanticipated events in recent American history —the assassinations, first of John and of Robert Kennedy, the murder of John Lennon, the space shuttle. The first thing to understand —and this will be important when we come to “The Body of Michael Brown” —is that Goldsmith’s piece is not about John F.

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