University of Wisconsin - Madison, United States
Xi “Títílayọ̀” Jin (she/her) is a PhD candidate in the Department of African Cultural Studies, with a Minor in Visual Cultures at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. Her fields of specialization include restitution, decoloniality, and critical museum studies. Her dissertation, If the Object Could Run: Misrecognized Mediators, Encountered Affinities, and the Ethics of Restitution, examines African responses to restitution across literature, film, performance, and curatorial practice. Drawing on African ontologies, Black studies, and Thing Theory, the project explores how African writers, filmmakers, artists, and curators reframes restitution as an ongoing, contested process—shaped not by legal closure, but by dissonance, desire, and the labor of reattachment. Restitution, in her account, is not a return to origin but a relational, affective, and ontological reactivation. Beyond her dissertation, she also explores China–Africa cultural relations. Her paper titled “An Eastern Gaze: Reconsidering ‘African Art’ from a Chinese Perspective” appears in Entangled Histories and Ambivalent Feelings: China and Africa Encounters in Culture and Media (Routledge, 2025).
Disclosure information not submitted.
African-Asian Exchanges: Teaching, Learning, and Dialogue
Saturday, June 14, 2025
09:00 - 10:45 GMT
Saturday, June 14, 2025
09:00 - 10:45 GMT