Date: Tuesday, 20th September
2016, Ballroom, Keele Hall, Keele University
Keynote speakers: Professor Claire
Alexander (The University of Manchester) and Professor Kalwant Bhopal (The
University of Southampton)
Event Outline
“Much of the
Eurocentric masculinist worldview fosters Black women's subordination. But
placing Black women's experiences at the center of analysis offers fresh
insights on the prevailing concepts, paradigms, and epistemologies of this
worldview” – Patricia Hill Collins, 1990.
The category ‘Black’ during the 1980s homogenised
the struggles of Caribbean and Asian communities in racist Britain. However,
the applicability of this categorisation towards British Asians has been
contested (Modood, 1994) and even its use towards African diasporic communities
(Kwesi, 2015). Despite these contestations, the UK welcomes a Black Studies
degree to Britain at Birmingham City University in September 2017, signalling
the importance of disrupting historically White spaces and decolonising
knowledge. This conference day will bring together academic scholars who
identify as black, to provide an intellectual space to discuss about the impact
of ‘race’ and gender on their academic work. This day is unique in also
providing a reflective space for scholars’ experiences of survival at the
margins (hooks, 1990). Women of colour working within the social sciences in
the UK are often still marginalised and face other, intersectional challenges
not illuminated under traditional inequalities’ discourse. We invite scholars,
intellectuals and activist women of colour to contest Eurocentric, male and
heterosexual epistemologies. The margins should not solely be seen as a site of
disadvantage; rather, this event is shaped by an understanding that black women
academics’ liminal position in historically White spaces offers the
“opportunity/obligation to transcend their either/or way of knowing” (Dunbar,
2008:86).
Confirmed established academics' panelists: Professor Farzana Shain
(University of Keele), Dr Denise Noble (Birmingham City University), Dr Lorna
Roberts (Manchester Metropolitan University), Dr Shirin Housee (University of Wolverhampton),
Dr Lisa Palmer (Birmingham City University, TBC)
Call for papers
We
invite paper contributions from doctoral, early career, to established academics
writing in the following thematic areas:
-Black
academics or students in Higher Education;
-Black
cultures in Britain;
-‘Race’,
ethnicity and (black) girl/boyhood;
-Black
communities in popular culture;
-Migration
and narrative stories from black communities
-Queer
studies or trans studies related to black communities
Please email
abstracts (up to 250 words) to Nadena Doharty (n.doharty@keele.ac.uk) by Friday, 26th
August 2016 indicating any special technological requirements. Each panelist
will have a maximum of 15 minutes to present.
Registration
Click
HERE
to register: BSA Member registration £10, Non-Member Registration £25
Caribbean
lunch provided, though please make sure
you indicate any special dietary requirements. Places limited so please
book quickly.
Any
queries about the event to be sent to Nadena Doharty, n.doharty@keele.ac.uk
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