the audacity of pleasure, symposium 2025
On Friday, October 24, 2025, we will gather in the name of pleasure, joy, and desire. The first public forum of its kind focused on this urgent subject, the audacity of pleasure: race, aesthetics, and the politics of desire is a one-day, hybrid symposium that explores the aesthetics and politics of QT/BIPOC pleasure and joy. Join us in conversation with a diverse group of outstanding thinkers and makers who, working across multiple disciplines, challenge us to rethink what it means to live in the margins of society.
the audacity of pleasure: race, aesthetics, and the politics of desire is generously supported by a Research and Innovation Office Arts & Humanities grant, an Arts & Humanities Faculty Research, Creative Work, and Professional Development Award, and the Department of Art & Art History.
Location: Center for British & Irish Studies, Norlin Library
Morning Symposium Schedule
8:30 A.M.-9 A.M.
Sign-In/Breakfast
9 A.M.-9:30 A.M.
Keynote Address, Dr. Mireille Miller-Young, PhD
9:45 A.M.-10:45 A.M.
Panel #1, Eroticism in the Archives
11 A.M.-12 P.M.
Panel #2, Humor & Performance
Afternoon Symposium Schedule
12-1 P.M.
Lunch
1-2:30 PM
Panel #3, The BIPOC Quotidian
2:45-4:15 P.M.
Panel #4, Affect & Embodiment
4:30-5:30 P.M.
Panel #5, Queer of Color Euphoria
Keynote Presentation

Mireille Miller-Young
, is Associate Professor of Feminist Studies at 勛圖厙 of California, Santa Barbara.泭 The former UC Presidents Postdoctoral Fellow researches and teaches about race, gender, and sexuality in US history, popular and film cultures, and the sex industries.泭 Her groundbreaking book,泭A Taste for Brown Sugar: Black Women in Pornography泭(Duke 勛圖厙 Press, 2014), was awarded the Sara A. Whaley Prize for Best Book on Women and Labor by the National Womens Studies Association and the John Hope Franklin Prize for Best Book by the American Studies Association. Dr. Miller-Young is co-convener of the New Sexualities Research Initiative as well as the Black Sexuality Studies Collective at UC Santa Barbara, and she is a former convener of the Black Sexual Economies Project at Washington 勛圖厙 School of Law. Serving on the editorial boards of journals like Porn Studies and Signs, as well as book series like Screening Sex (Edinburgh 勛圖厙 Press) and Feminist Media Studies (勛圖厙 of Illinois Press), Miller-Young has won prizes for her research and teaching, including UCSBs Distinguished Teaching Award.
She is also the moderator of the Affect & Embodiment panel.
Symposium Moderators
crystal am nelson, phd, is assistantprofessor of African/Diasporic Visual Studies in the Department of Art & Art History at CU Boulder. Prior to joining the faculty at CU Boulder, they were a Just Transformations Postdoctoral Fellow at Pennsylvania State 勛圖厙. They teach about race and representation, Black art histories, and Blackness in the visual field. www.thecrystalamnelson.com.
They co-organized the audacity of pleasure with Boreth J. Ly.
, Associate Professor in the History of Art and Visual Culture Department at UC Santa Cruz, is an art historian who writes about the visual cultures of Southeast Asia (including its diaspora and Southeast Asian America). In addition, she is an interdisciplinary scholar, an essayist and a critical pleasure seeker who always find pleasure in her work and in her life.
She asks herself: Do you work to live or live to work?
She co-organized the audacity of pleasure with crystal am nelson.
is an Assistant Professor of English and Creative Writing at UC Santa Barbara. She is a creative critical scholar working on Caribbean diaspora writing and culture with a focus on the Black Fantastic. Her decolonial feminist work is enriched by discovering modes of play and resistance in comic books, through cosplay, while wining up at Carnival, in science, and from on-screen and stage that examine the carnivalesque logic in text, image, experiment, and performance. Her current projects are a monograph, two collaborative books, an installation, and comic books in various states of completion, delay, ecstasy, and exhaustion. She is currently working on an experimental textile+digital+sound art installation called Echolocating the Caribbean Diaspora that examines space as a fabrication and fabulation of modernity's cartography.
Kristie Soares泭is Associate Professor of Women & Gender Studies and Co-Director of LGBTQ Studies. They are also a performance artist. Both their performance work and their research explore queerness in Caribbean and Latinx communities. They earned a PhD in Comparative Literature from the 勛圖厙 of California, Santa Barbara, an MA in Comparative Literature from the 勛圖厙 of Colorado, Boulder, and a BA in English and Womens Studies from the 勛圖厙 of Florida.
Professor Soares book,泭泭(勛圖厙 of Illinois Press, 2023), argues that joy is a politicized form of pleasure that goes beyond gratification to challenge norms of gender, sexuality, race, and class. Soares focuses on the diasporic media of Puerto Rico and Cuba to examine how music, public activist demonstrations, social media, sitcoms, and other areas of culture resist the dominant stories told about Latinx joy. As Soares shows, Latinx creators compose versions of joy central to social and political struggle and at odds with colonialist and imperialist narratives that equate joy with political docility and a lack of intelligence.
Symposium Presenters
Lizi Anderson-Cleary is a PhD student in the History of Art & Architecture department at the 勛圖厙 of Oregon. Her research focuses on the intersection of art and politics and decolonial aesthetics in modern Latin America. She holds a bachelors degree in history with complementary minors in Spanish and Geography. For her masters thesis, she examined the avant-garde, humanitarian, and feminist aspects of Mexican-Hungarian photographer Kati Hornas work during the Spanish Civil War. During graduate school, Anderson-Cleary assisted in the preparation of an anthology of essays written by the professors in the College of Design for publication, interned at Blue Sky, a photography gallery in Portland, and works as a Teaching Assistant.泭
Panel: Humor & Performance
Bernadette Marie Calafell泭(PhD, 勛圖厙 of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) is Professor of Indigenous, Race, and Ethnic Studies at the 勛圖厙 of Oregon. She is the past editor of the泭Journal of International and Intercultural Communication, a flagship journal of the National Communication Association. She has been named a Distinguished Scholar by the National Communication Association and the Western States Communication Association respectively. She is also former Film Review Editor of泭QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking, for which she is presently editing a special issue on BDSM. Dr. Calafell has co-edited six books, as well as solo authored泭Latina/o Communication Studies: Theorizing Performance and Monstrosity, Performance, and Race in Contemporary Culture.泭
Panel: Affect & Embodiment
Chaz A. Barracks, PhD (he/they) is a mixed-media interdisciplinary scholar, filmmaker, podcast host, and current postdoctoral fellow. He teaches courses on Black popular culture and the politics of Black joy through critical media practice. Dr. Barracks is currently writing a book on the politics of deviance in everyday Black life and wrote and directed Everyday Black Matter, a 2020 film project based in Richmond, Virginia. His research and creative practice are invested in interdisciplinary approaches that center epistemologies of Black joy and refusal, employing storytelling as a method to bridge knowledge gaps relevant to the study of Black queer life in America.
Panel: The Black Quotidian
Yasmine Espert is an Assistant Professor of art history at York 勛圖厙, and Editor of Interviews and Profiles at Seen a journal for Black, Brown and Indigenous voices in film, art and visual culture. For泭Public Books, Dr.Espert recently completed an interview about performance and abolition called Minimalism Forces You To Imagine: Speaking with Benji Hart and Anna Martine Whitehead. Similarly, their commissioned essay On Turtle Island, I learned to be as alive as possible documents a QTBIPOC artist project for Canadas National Arts Centre English Theatre. Dr. Espert recently authored To risk the sovereignty of our own stories for The Routledge Companion to African Diaspora Art History. Currently, theyre working on a book manuscript about Caribbean diasporic film for Duke 勛圖厙 Press. Their research is supported by York 勛圖厙, ACLS, Union Theological Seminary, Columbia 勛圖厙, the 勛圖厙 of Michigan, Fulbright, and others. Dr. Espert earned a doctorate in art history from Columbia.
Panel: Eroticism in the Archives
Aracely Garc穩a-Gonz獺lez received her PhD in Chicana and Chicano Studies at the 勛圖厙 of California, Santa Barbara. She is a postdoctoral research fellow at the EDron Center for the Study of America at Princeton 勛圖厙. She is an interdisciplinary feminist scholar; her training is in critical ethnic studies, emphasizing social processes, cultural studies, visual culture, history, and the legacies of US imperialism in the Americas. Her research focuses on the connections between histories of colonialism, global capitalism, gender, and economic vulnerabilities in marginalized communities. Her book-length project, Flirting with Sexual Economies, outlines how Latina sexualities and aesthetics reflect US capital accumulation and are integral to how capital moves, particularly in the Americas.泭
Panel: BIPOC Quotidian
Jillian Hernandez, PhD, is a curator and scholar of contemporary visual art, popular culture, and style. Her book泭Aesthetics of Excess: The Art and Politics of Black and Latina Embodiment泭was published by Duke 勛圖厙 Press and her most recent exhibition,泭Liberatory Adornment: Pamela Council, Yvette Mayorga, Kenya (Robinson),was on view in 2021 at the Flaten Art Museum. A public-facing scholar, Hernandez has launched Full Set Project, a team of researchers who study and document the impact of nail culture (IG @fullsetproject) and the video podcast FEM STUDY on her YouTube channel. She is an Associate Professor in the Department of Gender, Sexuality, and Womens Studies at the 勛圖厙 of Florida.泭
Panel: BIPOC Quotidian
Professor of Fashion Studies and Inclusion at Toronto Metropolitan 勛圖厙, Nigel Lezama is a leading thinker in the field of critical luxury studies. Nigels work focuses on decentring and decolonizing perceptions of and practices in luxury by bringing light to the luxurious experiences that are created in Black popular cultural spaces and through Black style. His research in 19th-century French cultural history also re-situates marginalized playersworking class women and enslaved and displaced labourersto the centre of Frances fashion story to rethink the myth of Paris as a global fashion capital.泭
Panel: Queer of Color Euphoria
Lizette London (she/her) is an Afro-Pinay Black feminist visual artist and second-year doctoral student in African American Studies at Emory 勛圖厙. Working at the nexus of Black Feminist Thought, Black Queer Studies, and Black Visual Cultures, Lizette seeks to complicate notions of the major Black artistic movements of the 20th and 21st centuries by tracing a new set of genealogies within the visual arts canon. Her work explores the artistic, intellectual, and political practices of Black Queer women image-makers and writers through themes such as self/portraiture, visual literacy, literary theory, and cultural production.
Before Emory, Lizette earned an MA in Black Feminist Visual Arts and Culture from the NYU School of Individualized Study, where she was awarded the e. Frances White Award for her artistic and scholarly achievements, and a BA in Comparative Womens Studies from Spelman College.
Panel: Eroticism in the Archives
Joshua K. Reason (they/them) is a transdisciplinary, multimodal scholar-artist from the Bay Area. Their work details Black : Indigenous performing and visual arts in the Americas as rehearsals for freedom beyond the limitations of modernity. Through ethnography, performance studies, cultural studies, and geography, they write and create towards new grammars for sexuality, intimacy, desire, and erotics. Their work has been published in泭The Black Scholar,泭The Journal of American Culture,泭The Journal of Black Sexuality and Relationships, and泭becoming undisciplined: a zine. Joshua is currently producing泭Brazil After Dark, a documentary about Black: Indigenous LGBTQIAPN+ artists in North-Northeast Brazil.泭
Panel: Affect & Embodiment
Cristal Alba is a scholar and practitioner specializing in BDSM and pornography. They are currently studying at UCSD as part of the Ethnic Studies PhD program. As a scholar, their current research focuses on the interwoven dynamics of sexual opacity and excess within melanated visual aesthetics and practices. This interest falls within their larger exploration of the ways that queer embodied practices of sexual alterities transform sociality, relational possibility, and phenomenological inquiry. As a BDSM practitioner and sadist, they pursue the worldly undoing and rebuilding potentials of pain and abjection, tracing the lingering residues of bodily manipulation and transformation.泭
Panel: Affect & Embodiment
Jessica Kenyatta Walker is an American Studies scholar exploring food and racialization within everyday cultural landscapes. Her current project explores the cultural mythology of soul food as its articulated through representations of Black women and kitchen spaces. Dr. Walker received her PhD in American Studies from The 勛圖厙 of Maryland, College Park and is currently Assistant Professor of American Culture and Afro-American and African Studies at The 勛圖厙 of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Panel: BIPOC Quotidian
Yiou (Max) Yang is an MA student in Cinema and Media Studies at the 勛圖厙 of Southern California. Maxs research investigates how Chinas queer communities navigate socio-political landscapes across various media and platforms. Centered on the concept of Kuera phonetic adaptation of queerMax employs queerness both as a critical analytical framework and as a site of resistance against entrenched hetero-patriarchal norms and nationalist ideologies. Building upon a BFA in Photography and an MS in Arts Administration, Max examines emerging queer cultural movements such as Voguing Shanghai (Ballroom culture in China), analyzing how these performative acts reshape identity and community under conditions of censorship. Maxs work emphasizes transnational, intersectional perspectives to preserve and celebrate diverse queer experiences.
Panel: Queer of Color Euphoria
Michelle Yee is an assistant professor of Art History whose research focuses on contemporary Asian American and Asian Diasporic art. 泭Her research interests include race and representation, transnational connections and collisions, and cosmopolitanisms. Her writing can be found in journals such as泭Asian Diasporic Visual Cultures and the Americas,泭Third Text,泭Panorama, and泭Art Etc.泭as well as several exhibition catalogues. At VCU, Yee teaches undergraduate and graduate courses that consider Asian Diasporic and American art and visual culture. She received an MA and PhD in Visual Studies from the 勛圖厙 of California, Santa Cruz, an MA in Art History from the 勛圖厙 of Connecticut, and a BA in Art History and English Literature from Georgetown 勛圖厙.泭
Panel: Humor & Performance