Event

"Our Spirits Fight For Our Lives: Vodou Art of the Haitian Revolution, the 2010 Earthquake, and COVID-19" a talk by Dr. Kyrah Malika Daniels

Date, time, location

Date

Friday, March 7, 2025

Time

12:15 pm to 1:15 pm EST

Location

King Building, 106

10 N. Professor St.
Oberlin, OH 44074

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Kyrah Malika Daniels is an Assistant Professor of African American Studies at Emory University. She completed her B.A. in Africana Studies from Stanford University, and earned her M.A. in Religion and her Ph.D. in African & African American Studies at Harvard University. Professor Daniels teaches courses on Africana religions and art history, material culture and museum studies, and race, religion, and representation. Her research centers on African derived religions, sacred arts, religious initiation and conversion, and ritual healing traditions in the Black Atlantic. For the 2019-2020 academic year, she was awarded a Getty/ACLS Postdoctoral Fellowship in the History of Art.

Daniels is currently completing a book tentatively titled Art of the Healing Gods: Illness, Imbalance & Sacred Arts of the Black Atlantic, a comparative religion project that examines ritual art traditions and religious healing legacies of Kongo-derived communities in Haiti and the Democratic Republic of  Congo (Congo-Kinshasa). The book investigates how sacred art objects mediate relationships between humans and spirits in healing ceremonies to treat spiritual illness and imbalance holistically. Daniels' work has been published in the Journal of Africana Religions, Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism, the Journal of Haitian Studies, and the Journal for the American Academy of Religion.

Between 2009-2010, Daniels served as Junior Curator at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C. Following the earthquake of 2010, she worked in St. Raphael, Haiti, with Lakou Solèy Academic and Cultural Arts Center, a grassroots organization that develops arts-based pedagogy. Previously, she held the first appointment dedicated to African religious heritage traditions and African and African Diaspora art history at Boston College. Daniels currently serves as Leadership Council Member for the African and Diasporic Religious Studies Association (ADRSA) and as Vice President for KOSANBA, the Scholarly Association for the Study of Haitian Vodou.

This event is sponsored by The Office of Religious and Spiritual Life and co-sponsored by the MRC, Africana Studies and Religion Departments and the Art History Baldwin Lectures Endowment. 


Open to the public

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