The Black image, history and Artificial Intelligence
The rise of AI has meant threats and opportunities for Black history. We look at issues from new minstrels to ancient re-creations
Date and time
Location
Online
About this event
- Event lasts 1 hour 30 minutes
Blackness and AI
A.I. is consuming and producing Blackness at an alarming rate. From large language models (LLMs) that make up chatbots like ChatGPT, to generated audio, images and videos of Black people, the rapidly developing capacity of AI tools to mimic and reproduce Black styles isboth cause for concern and a site of possibility.Using examples such as ChatGPT’s introduction of voice mode and recent ability to perform a multitude of accents, Dr. Walcott introduces current debates surrounding AI tools. Should we see generative AI as blackface or kin? What are thepotential harms andpossibilities of these technologies for Black folks? And how should we navigate these technologies, with acceptance or refusal?
This online talk by Dr Rianna Walcott will be folowed by Q&A. Zoom link will be sent closer to the time please check your JUNK mail.
This talk is linked to the Prince of Peckham in-person lecture series for great weekly talks, July-September HERE
These events provide a safe space at a time when they are serious cuts to to Black history /education at Chichester, Birmingham and Goldsmiths universities. Executives at BSix College in Hackney, that has a record of pushing Black students to Oxford/Cambridge, wants to cut its education/Black history programme due to 'restructuring' . The BFI Southbank despite 17,000 signatures to keep the 17-year-old African Odysseys, educational, anti-racist film series going, has cancelled the programme due to 'restructuring'.
For more information and to support BSIX click HERE
For more information and to support African Odysseys click HERE
About the speaker
Dr. Rianna Walcott is an Assistant Professor of Communication (https://communication.umd.edu/directory/rianna-walcott)at the University of Maryland, and Associate Director of theBlack Communication and Technology (BCaT) Lab (https://www.bcatlab.org/)as part of theDISCO Network (https://www.disconetwork.org/). Dr. Walcott earned her PhD in Digital Humanities at King's College London for her research on Black British communication practices across social media platforms, locating the evolution of a hybrid ‘Black British’ identity against the wider Black diaspora. She combines digital research, Black feminist praxis, decolonial studies, arts and culture, and mental health advocacy in her work. In the time left over, she moonlights as a jazz singer.