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Call for Papers for Session at RGS-IBG Conference, London, 27th-30th August
2019

Resistance in the Master's House: Researching race in troubling times

 

Session Convenors: Shereen Fernandez (QMUL) & Azeezat Johnson (QMUL)

 

Sponsored by: Race, Culture and Equality Working Group (RACE)

 

The proposed session works from Audre Lorde's (1984) warning against using
the Master's tools to dismantle the Master's house (i.e. the evolving
implicit and explicit logics of white supremacy). This is an opportunity for
us to confront our role as academics in the reproduction of white supremacy:
how does anti-racist scholarship and activism occur alongside and/or in
spite of the white supremacist logics that sustains the Master's house? This
is particularly important to address at the RGS-IBG conference given the
expense of participating in these spaces of knowledge dissemination, thus
controlling who can (literally) afford to participate in the development of
academic scholarship. We explore these questions in light of our neo- and
re-colonising contexts (Esson et al. 2017), as well as the intertwined
histories of coloniality, white supremacy and the discipline of Geography
(McKittrick 2006; Noxolo, Raghuram, and Madge 2008; Yusoff 2018). This
interrogation of our role in academia is used to re-imagine racial justice
in these troubling and uncertain times.

 

Please send abstracts (max. 300 words) to Shereen Fernandez
([log in to unmask]) and Azeezat Johnson ([log in to unmask]) by
Monday 4th February.

 

We invite abstracts that relate (but are not limited to) the following
questions:

*	How do we move beyond self-flagellating statements about reflexivity
and positionality, and towards challenging power structures and racial
inequality within and beyond the academy?
*	How do we organise effectively as academics given the urgency of
these systems of oppression? What are some practical methods of activism
that we as academics can take up across different local, national and
regional contexts? 
*	How do we resist the depoliticization of tools that critique the
functioning of white supremacy? What can be done to re-engage with the
explicitly political rationale of decolonisation, postcolonialism and
intersectionality?

*	Where does/can racial justice take place? How do we account for
shifting constructions of race across different temporal and regional
contexts?
*	What are the benefits and limitations of social media and 'private'
communication for activists and scholars working on racial justice? 
*	How do we perpetuate legislation and border controls within the
academy (e.g. through the Prevent Duty or immigration checks), and how does
this impact work on racial justice? 

We are particularly keen to engage with scholars located outside of the
"Global North" and under-represented groups within the "Global North". We
encourage scholars within and beyond Geography to apply. 

 

 

References

Esson, James, Patricia Noxolo, Richard Baxter, Patricia Daley, and Margaret
Byron. 2017. 'The 2017 RGS-IBG chair's theme: decolonising geographical
knowledges, or reproducing coloniality?', Area, 49: 384-88.

Lorde, Audre. 1984. Sister Outsider: essays and speeches (The Crossing
Press: California).

McKittrick, Katherine. 2006. Demonic grounds: Black women and the
cartographies of struggle (University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis).

Noxolo, Patricia, Parvati Raghuram, and Clare Madge. 2008. ''Geography is
Pregnant' and 'Geography's Milk is Flowing': Metaphors for a Postcolonial
Discipline?', Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 26: 146-68.

Yusoff, Kathryn. 2018. A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None (University of
Minnesota Press: Minnesota).

 

 

 

 

Best wishes,

Azeezat

 

 

Dr Azeezat Johnson 

ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow

School of Geography

Queen Mary University of London

 <http://www.azeezatjohnson.wordpress.com/> www.azeezatjohnson.wordpress.com

T: @azeezatj

 

Latest publication:
<https://www.zedbooks.net/shop/book/the-fire-now/forthcoming/> The Fire Now:
anti-racist scholarship in times of explicit racial violence

 

 


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