BUFFALO, N.Y. -- John Jennings, associate professor of visual
studies at the University at Buffalo and a 2012 UB Humanities
Institute Fellow, will discuss his graphic novel on the Great
Migration at 4 p.m. on Nov. 9 at Hallwalls, 341 Delaware Ave.,
Buffalo.
Jennings' talk, "Conjuring the Past: An Ethno-Gothic Graphic
Narrative of the Great Migration," is the third in the 2012
Scholars at Hallwalls series of lectures in the humanities
presented by the UB Humanities Institute and Hallwalls Contemporary
Arts Center.
The Great Migration is a term given to the movement of 6 million
African Americans from the rural South to the Northeast, Midwest
and West between 1910 and 1970.
Jennings' project is one that investigates one of its
consequences: the Policy Era in 1930s Chicago. "Policy," a common
name for the numbers racket, refers to the illegal lottery game
that migrated from the South during the Great Migration, and was
played for decades, largely in poor U.S. neighborhoods. The term
"policy," reflects the game's similarity to cheap insurance, both
being a gamble on the future.
Jennings' novel is a historical fiction narrative set in
Chicago's Bronzeville, the South Side community designated in the
early decades of the 20th century as the only space in the city
where African Americans could reside. It became a thriving black
metropolis, home to a broad range of entrepreneurs, musicians,
novelists, playwrights and poets from Louis Armstrong and Richard
Wright to Muddy Waters and Lorraine Hansberry, and was the home of
a thriving numbers racket.
His narrative is multimodal in nature and uses the comic medium
to tell a story that blends pulp-noir detective story with
supernatural thriller. Jennings employs Gothic tropes with a
critical race perspective, a style he refers to the style as "Ethno
Gothic."
The function of his book, Jennings says, is to discover, unpack
and exorcise American historical revenants that continue to haunt
and undermine equality in our society.
His project also will feature an exhibition of artwork generated
from his research for the book and, if possible, a symposium
examining the importance of the Policy Era in American history.
Jennings is a designer, curator, illustrator, cartoonist and
award-winning graphic novelist, whose work involves disciplines
such as American studies, African American studies, design history,
media study, sociology, literature and women and gender
studies.
Scholars at Hallwalls series events are free and open to the
public, and talks are presented in terms accessible to the general
public. Complimentary hors d'oeuvres are served and the audience is
encouraged to engage the speaker in discussion of the issue at
hand.