Black Mirror/Expejo Negro (Exhibition Catalog)
Decolonial Aesthetics: Unlearning and Relearning the Museum Through Pedro Lasch’s Black Mirror/Espejo Negro
Publication
, Chapter
Mignolo, WD
2010
Duke Scholars
Publication Date
2010
Start / End Page
86 / 103
Publisher
John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute/Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University
Citation
APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Mignolo, W. D. (2010). Decolonial Aesthetics: Unlearning and Relearning the Museum Through Pedro Lasch’s Black Mirror/Espejo Negro. In P. Lasch & J. A. González (Eds.), Black Mirror/Expejo Negro (Exhibition Catalog) (pp. 86–103). Durham: John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute/Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University.
Mignolo, W. D. “Decolonial Aesthetics: Unlearning and Relearning the Museum Through Pedro Lasch’s Black Mirror/Espejo Negro.” In Black Mirror/Expejo Negro (Exhibition Catalog), edited by P. Lasch and Jennifer A. González, 86–103. Durham: John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute/Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, 2010.
Mignolo WD. Decolonial Aesthetics: Unlearning and Relearning the Museum Through Pedro Lasch’s Black Mirror/Espejo Negro. In: Lasch P, González JA, editors. Black Mirror/Expejo Negro (Exhibition Catalog). Durham: John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute/Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University; 2010. p. 86–103.
Mignolo, W. D. “Decolonial Aesthetics: Unlearning and Relearning the Museum Through Pedro Lasch’s Black Mirror/Espejo Negro.” Black Mirror/Expejo Negro (Exhibition Catalog), edited by P. Lasch and Jennifer A. González, John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute/Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, 2010, pp. 86–103.
Mignolo WD. Decolonial Aesthetics: Unlearning and Relearning the Museum Through Pedro Lasch’s Black Mirror/Espejo Negro. In: Lasch P, González JA, editors. Black Mirror/Expejo Negro (Exhibition Catalog). Durham: John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute/Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University; 2010. p. 86–103.
Publication Date
2010
Start / End Page
86 / 103
Publisher
John Hope Franklin Humanities Institute/Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University