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Widline Cadet’s debut monograph Ritual [Dis]Appearance / Seremoni Disparisyon offers a critical exploration of photography as a visual archive of her family’s diasporic experience. Drawing from her Haitian heritage and personal archive, Cadet weaves together staged portraits, archival interventions, and atmospheric stills to examine how Black and immigrant identities are shaped, remembered, and at times, fragmented across time and space. Her images are both intimate and expansive—merging personal narrative with broader questions of identity, memory, displacement, cultural continuity and erasure. The book features an essay by Shanna Jean-Baptiste, along with interviews and conversations between Widline and her great aunt, mother, and sister—three women representing different generations of her family.
Excerpt from Kolepyese the essay by contributing writer Shanna Jean-Baptiste: “Cadet has explained that her approach to photography is driven by a deeply personal longing: “there are barely any photographs or documentation of my family. . . . There is a hole left by the absence of a physical or visual object from that time when I try to tell someone about my childhood. As I and my parents’ generation get older—and having lost the last of my grandparents in recent years—I feel more desperate to have an image of them as a point of reference and remembrance when memories start to fail.”[1] What happens when memory begins to fail for those of us living in the diaspora? Does it lead to disappearance? Who or what disappears during this process? Is it the haunting memories of there that risk fading? Is it the very essence of the diasporic identity itself that is under threat? Is assimilation into a different culture a ritual of disappearance?Is it the emergence of a new identity—one that, rather than clinging to a supposed natif-natal (authentic) self, supplants it with something else? If the tension between here and there, a tension so fundamental to diasporic existence, were to dissolve, what would remain?.”
Publication date: May 13, 2025
Format: Hardcover Number of Pages: 128 Number of images: 55 Measurements: 8.5 × 10.5 × .5 inches
ISBN: 979-8-9929887-0-3
*This item is scheduled to ship mid August 2025. Shipping only within the U.S.
** PLEASE NOTE BECAUSE THIS IS A SMALL SHOP I CANNOT ACCEPT ANY EXCHANGES OR RETURNS.
Books are non-refundable and non-returnable. If there is an issue with your order, please fill out the contact form.
Widline Cadet’s debut monograph Ritual [Dis]Appearance / Seremoni Disparisyon offers a critical exploration of photography as a visual archive of her family’s diasporic experience. Drawing from her Haitian heritage and personal archive, Cadet weaves together staged portraits, archival interventions, and atmospheric stills to examine how Black and immigrant identities are shaped, remembered, and at times, fragmented across time and space. Her images are both intimate and expansive—merging personal narrative with broader questions of identity, memory, displacement, cultural continuity and erasure. The book features an essay by Shanna Jean-Baptiste, along with interviews and conversations between Widline and her great aunt, mother, and sister—three women representing different generations of her family.
Excerpt from Kolepyese the essay by contributing writer Shanna Jean-Baptiste: “Cadet has explained that her approach to photography is driven by a deeply personal longing: “there are barely any photographs or documentation of my family. . . . There is a hole left by the absence of a physical or visual object from that time when I try to tell someone about my childhood. As I and my parents’ generation get older—and having lost the last of my grandparents in recent years—I feel more desperate to have an image of them as a point of reference and remembrance when memories start to fail.”[1] What happens when memory begins to fail for those of us living in the diaspora? Does it lead to disappearance? Who or what disappears during this process? Is it the haunting memories of there that risk fading? Is it the very essence of the diasporic identity itself that is under threat? Is assimilation into a different culture a ritual of disappearance?Is it the emergence of a new identity—one that, rather than clinging to a supposed natif-natal (authentic) self, supplants it with something else? If the tension between here and there, a tension so fundamental to diasporic existence, were to dissolve, what would remain?.”
Publication date: May 13, 2025
Format: Hardcover Number of Pages: 128 Number of images: 55 Measurements: 8.5 × 10.5 × .5 inches
ISBN: 979-8-9929887-0-3
*This item is scheduled to ship mid August 2025. Shipping only within the U.S.
** PLEASE NOTE BECAUSE THIS IS A SMALL SHOP I CANNOT ACCEPT ANY EXCHANGES OR RETURNS.
Books are non-refundable and non-returnable. If there is an issue with your order, please fill out the contact form.