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darkmatter journal (www.darkmatter101.org) is pleased to invite you to its
first annual symposium and journal relaunch.

Post-racial Imaginaries
The symposium will focus on the theme of 'Post-race'. Increasing reference
to the notion of ‘post-race’ is suggestive of an emergent discursive
framework in critical approaches to race and racism. ‘Post-race’,
‘post-racial’, ‘post-black’, and associated ideas, are being mobilized in
various theoretical, cultural and political discourses to describe new
racial formations. Post-race requires us to question in new ways the
precepts of race thinking, positing the end of race as a point with which to
think racial futures. The imprecise nature of much ‘post-’ talk means there
has yet to be a rigorous assessment of the significance of post-race and its
cognate terms, beyond simple endorsement or dismissal.

Date: Saturday 14th May 2011
Time: 10.30am - 4pm symposium followed by reception
Place: Room RS451 (4th Floor), University of Westminster, 309 Regent Street,
London W1B 2UW.
Directions - www.westminster.ac.uk/about/how-to-find-us/regent-street

This is an invitation event. Places are limited. Book your attendance by
sending an email to [log in to unmask]
The event is free (though a donation of £5 is welcome on the day for fully
waged participants).

Programme:
10.30 - 11.00am Tea & Coffee
11.00 - 11.15am Introduction - Ash Sharma
11.15 - 1.00pm Session I: Brett St Louis  & Denise Da Silva (Chair: Ben
Pitcher)
1.00 - 2.15 Lunch (not provided)
2.15 - 4.00pm Session II: Miri Song & Mark Sealy (Chair: Sanjay Sharma)
4.00 - 5.30pm Drinks Reception & darkmatter journal relaunch

The discussions will be facilitated by:

Brett St. Louis
Brett St. Louis is a Senior lecturer in the Department of Sociology at
Goldsmiths, University of London. His research interests crystallise around:
the conceptual and practical status of race, especially in relation to the
epistemological, ontological, political and ethical formations of racial
eliminativism; the possibilities of progressive left politics with regard to
building affirmative, emancipatory political projects; sociology of sport.
His publications include 'On "the necessity and the 'impossibility' of
identities: The politics and ethics of "new ethnicities"', Cultural Studies,
23:4, 2009; co-editing New Formations, No. 65, 'After '68: The Left and
Twenty-First Century Political Projects' (2008); and Rethinking Race,
Politics, and Poetics: C.L.R. James' Critique of Modernity, Routledge
(2007).

Denise Ferreira da Silva
Denise Ferreira da Silva taught at the Ethnic Studies department of the
University of California-San Diego for 11 years. She currently holds a Chair
in Ethics at Queen Mary, University of London. Focusing on global
subjugation, in particular in the racial and colonial machineries operating
in it, her work draws from philosophy, political theory, critical legal
theory, feminist theory, and psychoanalysis. Her recent publications
include:  "Notes for a Critique of the 'Metaphysics of Race'", TCS, 28(1),
2011; "Evo Morales: An Outline of a global Subject", Seattle University Law
Review/Journal for Social Justice, 8(1); “Many Hundred Thousand Bodies
Later: An Analysis of the ‘Legacy’ of the International Criminal Tribunal
for Rwanda” in Sundhya Pahuja et al, Events: The Force of International Law,
(Cavendish/Routledge); and her book Toward a Global Idea of Race (Univ. of
Minnesota Press, 2007).

Miri Song
Miri Song is a Reader in Sociology at the University of Kent. Her research
interests include ‘race’ and racisms, ethnic identity, immigration
adaptation, especially in relation to the second generation, and
citizenship.  Miri is the author of Helping Out: Children's Labor in Ethnic
Businesses (1999, Temple University Press, US) and Choosing Ethnic
Identity (2003,
Polity Press). She is currently writing a book called Mixed Race
Identities(with Peter Aspinall), which will be published with
Palgrave/Macmillan.

Mark Sealy
Mark Sealy has a special interest in photography and its relationship to
social change, identity politics and human rights. In his role as director
of Autograph ABP he has initiated the production of well over 40
publications, produced exhibitions worldwide, residency projects and
commissioned photographers globally. During his time with Autograph ABP,
Mark has jointly initiated and developed a £7.96 million capital building
project (Rivington Place). His most recent large scale curated project was
Disposable People: a Hayward Gallery Touring exhibition which opened at
Royal Festival Hall in London Oct 08 and toured nationally. His book
project, Different (2002, Phaidon Press) on photography and identity was
produced with Stuart Hall. Mark is currently working on a major photography
show for Ryerson University in Toronto, Canada which examines issues of
representation and human rights due to open in 2012.

The event is supported by the School of Social Sciences, Humanities and
Languages at the University of Westminster; the Centre for Cultural Studies
Research (CCSR) at the University of East London; and the British
Sociological Association (BSA) Race and Ethnicity Study Group.
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darkmatter Journal
http://www.darkmatter101.org/

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