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PCI Newsletter October 2019

Dear colleagues

With this newsletter we are happy to inform you about relevant events in the field of postcolonial studies, locally, nationally and internationally. Please take a look at our lists of conferences, lectures, films and publications for October and upcoming months.

Sandra Ponzanesi
Director PCI

PCI Events 

9th PCI Film Series 


The Postcolonial Studies Initiative is happy to announce its 9th film series with a selection of films, shown monthly, that draw on a variety of different contexts in our postcolonial world. The series is organized annually and invites all interested in our European postcolonial present and the representation of its political, cultural and aesthetic realities and challenges. Each film will be introduced briefly by scholars connected to the PCI and international guests and filmmakers. 

This series will include presentations with filmmakers and Q&As. We are very happy that this series will be opened by Pravini Baboeram who will present “The Uprising”, a music documentary that tells the story of resistance against racism in Europe.

Please join us for our first screening: 

The Uprising with Q&A with director (dir. Pravini Baboeram, 2019)  

 

About the film: 
Musician and activist Pravini Baboeram presents “The Uprising”, a music documentary that tells the story of resistance against racism in Europe. With commentary and experiences from academics and activists, the Dutch-Indian singer/songwriter offers a decolonial perspective on the anti-racism movement in the Netherlands, UK and France. She not only provides an analysis of the history and legacy of colonialism, but also a vision on strategy for the future of the movement.

This documentary zooms in on collective challenges of communities of color. In 9 self-written songs Pravini connects the fight against Blackface, the struggle for the recognition of colonial crimes that the Netherlands has committed in Indonesia, the fight for the liberation of Palestine and the struggle in the political field for an inclusive society. “The Uprising” offers a unique view of the resistance against racism in Europe through the eyes of people of color. Pravini's documentary has been selected for the international film festival DocuDonna in Massa Marittima, Italy. This festival focuses predominately on female directors who focus on societal issues in their work. For more information click here. To see the trailer click here.

Practical information
Date: 14 October, 2019
Time: 17:15-19:00
Location: Entrance at Muntstraat 2A, MCW-LAB (Grote zaal KNG20)
Web: https://www.pravinimusic.com/

Admission is free of charge. However, due to safety regulations, maximum capacity of the room is 80 people. Because the screening is part of the postcolonial studies minor, seating for non-UU students is limited. 

Cold War (dir. Pawlikowski, France, Poland, UK, 2018,1.28 min)  


Introduced by Sandra Ponzanesi (Utrecht University, Media and Culture Studies) 
 

Love Without Borders

Set against the background of the Cold War in the 1950s in Poland, Berlin, Yugoslavia and Paris, the film depicts an impossible love story in impossible times. Over and over, the hero and heroine of the film are separated by borders and ideologies, but they remain fatefully drawn to each other. 

On November 9, 2019, the pictures of the fall of the Berlin Wall are celebrating their 30th
anniversary. On November 25, the PCI is screening Cold War by acclaimed filmmaker
Pawel Pawlikowski to mark the event. The film is an ode to love at the time of the Iron
Curtain, and the tragic divisions caused before the Peaceful Revolution of 1989.
Paweł Pawlikowski follows his Oscar-winning Ida with the stunning Cold War, an epic
romance set against the backdrop of Europe after World War II. Shot in luminous black and
white, it’s a wistful and dreamlike journey through a divided continent – and a heartbreaking
portrait of ill-fated love. Paweł Pawlikowski won the best director award at Cannes in May 2018, the European Film Prize in five categories (best film, best director, best actress, best scenario, best editing) and the New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Foreign Language Film. The film was nominated for three Academy Awards and for two BAFTA Awards. Polish-born Pawel Pawlikowski started as a documentary filmmaker in British television. His second feature, Last Resort (2000), about an east European woman and her young son, washed up here in an unbelievably grim seaside holding area for asylum seekers, earned him international critical acclaim at numerous festivals, including Toronto and Sundance, and won the 2001 British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) award.

Official website: https://www.curzonartificialeye.com/cold-war/

Practical information:
Date: 25 November, 2019
Time: 17:00-19:00
Location: Entrance at Muntstraat 2A, MCW-LAB (Grote zaal KNG20)
More info: 
www.postcolonialstudies.nl

Admission is free of charge. However, due to safety regulations, maximum capacity of the room is 80 people. Because the screening is part of the postcolonial studies minor, seating for non-UU students is limited. 

Sixth Annual ACGS Conference: Racial Orders, Racist Borders

University of Amsterdam, 17-18 October, 2019

 

Racial Orders, Racist Borders is the sixth annual conference of the Amsterdam Centre for Globalisation Studies, organized in cooperation with the collaborative research center Dynamics of Security at the Universities of Giessen and Marburg, Germany. The conference brings together papers that examine how forms, discourses, and practices of racism have materialized in various institutional contexts. The Amsterdam Centre for Globalisation Studies (ACGS) was established at the University of Amsterdam in 2012, as part of the Cultural Transformations and Globalisation Research Priority Area. The Research Priority Areas represent the best the University of Amsterdam has to offer in terms of research in the field of the humanities. ACGS focuses on the profound and lasting ways in which globalisation is transforming our world. From new patterns of migration and diaspora, to new trends in city and nation-building, to new techno-informational networks of communication and knowledge, the world is in rapid flux. While the socioeconomic dimensions of globalisation have been widely studied, less attention has been paid to its cultural dimensions. And yet, the need to identify and understand how globalisation is effecting cultural change—spanning from Asia to Europe and from Africa to the Americas—is central to any effort to form a comprehensive picture of our contemporary world. ACGS responds directly to this need and, in the process, provides a strong humanities perspective that is frequently lacking in existing academic and public debates. The researchers brought together by ACGS have a longstanding tradition of analysing discourses and representations of the nation state, European citizenship, migrants, minorities, new media, and other related issues that are undergoing rapid and dramatic change as a result of globalisation. 

             
Practical information

Lecture by Gabrielle Sanchez: Humanitarian Discourse and Migrant Smuggling 

Utrecht University,  24 October, 2019

 

In the last few months, European and American audiences have witnessed multiple examples of the criminalization of the activities of NGOs in the Mediterranean and the US-Mexico border as migrant smuggling.  Many of those targeted have rejected the claims, and most specifically, the ones labeling them as ‘smugglers.'  This is not hard to explain. The very mention of the term smuggling generates a very specific range of notions–most of them criminal and tragic—while ‘smugglers’ occupy a special place in the list of contemporary organized criminal predators. It may come as a surprise that empirical knowledge on the series of activities legally defined as migrant smuggling, and more specifically, on the people who facilitate migrants’ irregular journeys is limited at best, despite being essential elements of the ways we think about irregular migration worldwide. This lecture, drawing from empirical work with migrants and the facilitators of their journeys on both the US Mexico border and North Africa, will ask: How has migrant smuggling been constructed in the context of humanitarianism? What does the widespread distaste for ‘smugglers’ reveal? And most importantly, who are the people behind migrants’ journeys, and why does examining the way they become ‘smugglers’ matter?  

Gabriella Sanchez is the lead of Migrant Smuggling Research the Migration Policy Centre at the European University Institute in Florence. With a background in law enforcement, she is the author of Human Smuggling and Border Crossings (Routledge 2016) and co-editor alongside Sheldon Zhang and Luigi Achilli of Crimes of Solidarity in Mobility: Alternative Views on Migrant Smuggling (2018), a special issue of The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. For more info


Practical information

  • Date of Symposium: 24 October, 2019
  • Location: Senaatzaal, Academiegebouw, Utrecht University

Seminar: "Connecting Values in the European Governance of Migration: Dynamics of solidarity" 

University of Utrecht, 25 October, 2019

Seminar “Connecting Values in the European Governance of Migration: Dynamics of solidarity” is taking place in Utrecht on 25th of October 2019, starting from 13:00h. At the event, leading experts in migration studies from the Netherlands, United States of America, Italy, and Hungary will present their research and address some of the most topical issues in the field of migration. The recent controversy around the case of Carola Rackete, who - among a heated political debate in (social) media - was released from her arrest for docking a migrant rescue ship without authorization in the port of Lampedusa with 42 migrants on board, raises once again the urgent questions of the legal and moral consequences of solidarity to migrants. The new book of prof. dr. Dina Siegel, titled Dynamics of Solidarity. Consequences of the 'refugee crisis' on Lesbos (2019) shows how the euphoric and warm-hearted welcome of refugees by the islanders in the early days of the crisis turned into disappointment and indifference. In many receiving countries the questions of solidarity, moral dilemmas, legal obstacles and practical solutions remain unsolved and understudied. These issues will be discussed and explored by experts participating in our seminar organized by Utrecht University, under the umbrella of RENFORCE (Utrecht Center for Regulation and Enforcement in Europe).

Attendees are kindly asked to formally register for the event. You can register here.

                                                                                                       
Practical information

  • Date: 25 October, 2019                                                                               
  • Location: Janskerkhof 2-3, Utrecht University

Conference: "Digital Fortress Europe": Exploring Boundaries between Media, Migration and Technology

Palace of Academies, Brussels, 30-31 October, 2019

 

The two-day conference “Digital Fortress Europe” intends to be a forum to reflect on the relations between media, migration, and technology. These relations demand our fullest attention because they touch on the essence of what migration means in societies that are undergoing democratic challenges. Research shows that media and technologies play a vital role for people who migrate, but that the same media and technologies serve to spread xenophobia, increase societal polarization and enable elaborate surveillance possibilities. With its intensifying anti-migration populist discourses, humanitarian border crises and efforts to secure borders through technological solutions, the European context provides a pulsating scene to examine such deepening relations. Taking place in the heart of Europe’s political capital, this conference aims to critically reflect on what the much-debated notion of “Fortress Europe” means in the digital age and how it can guide our future thinking on media and migration. As such, scholars of media, communication, migration and technology will be stimulated to contribute to critical discussions on border politics and migration debates. The thematic focus of this conference is on media, migration and technology and all their possible linkages and intersections. While significant attention goes to digital technologies and social media, the organizers do aim for a broad focus that also includes traditional media, and aspects of media production, organization, consumption, representation and policy.

Keynote speakers 

  • Payal Arora (Erasmus University)
  • Huub Dijstelbloem (University of Amsterdam
  • Myria Georgiou (LSE)

The program also includes a book launch and a public event, as well as a PhD masterclass on the day before the conference.                                                                                       

For more info

Practical information

  • Date: 30-31 October 2019
  • Location: Palace of Academies, Brussels

Call for Papers

Language and Migration: Experience and Memory

Migration Lab, People and Cultures across Borders, Princeton University and The Study Group on Language and the United Nations announce a collaborative symposium on Language and Migration: Experience and Memory


Columbia University and Princeton University, May 7-9, 2020 

Language is a vital, but underexplored, factor in the lives of migrants, immigrants and refugees. It has a direct impact on the experiences and choices of individuals displaced by war, terror, or natural disasters and the decisions made by agents who provide (or fail to provide) relief, services, and status. Distilled through memory, it shapes the fictions, poems, memoirs, films and song lyrics in which migrants render loss and displacement, integration and discovery, the translation of history and culture, and the trials of identity.

This interdisciplinary, international symposium on Language and Migration will examine the role of language in the lives and works of migrants.

Part One, will consider how language affects the experiences of permanently or temporarily settled refugees and migrants, those in transit, and the larger population around them. Such groups vary by age and gender, literacy and educational attainment, culture and religion, and the political, economic and cultural contexts in which they seek to settle. They suffer from language problems, loss of language, and linguistic abuse – and their host populations are often linguistically unready to receive them, to attend to their basic needs, or to educate their children. Such linguistic problems are a major challenge to the agencies and NGOs involved.

Part Two, at Princeton University, will focus on memory in the cultural work of migrants and immigrants. On Friday evening the symposium will resume with a reading by eminent faculty novelists, followed on Saturday by a keynote address and a full-day session on memory, language, and migration. We particularly welcome papers addressing the literature, psychology, and ethnography of migration. To foster conversation across disciplinary borders, participants are strongly urged to attend both parts of the symposium.

Princeton’s interdisciplinary “Migration Lab: People and Cultures Across Borders” comprises both humanists and social scientists, while the Study Group on Language and the UN includes diplomats, United Nations staff, NGO representatives, and academics in a range of fields. Accordingly, we invite proposals from a wide variety of disciplines in the humanities, social sciences, and law. For more info.

This symposium is co-sponsored by the Princeton Institute for International and Regional Studies and the Esperantic Studies Foundation.

 

Practical information

  • Deadline for proposals (max. 200 words for 20 min paper presentation) is 1 November, 2019
  • Date of Conference: May 7-9, 2020  
  • Location: Princeton, US and New York, US
  • Contact: eschor@princeton.edu

English in a World of Strangers:
Rethinking World Anglophone Studies

 

Goethe University Frankfurt, May 21-24, 2020 

In an increasingly globalized world characterized by multipolar power structures, transcultural flows and interlaced digital pathways, English has long since become a worldly language. A whole universe of discourse predicated on the question of who owns English has been thrown into doubt: more than a billion people worldwide ‘do’ English in new and often unexpected ways, and anglophone literatures and cultures all over the world have become veritable contact zones characterized by multilingualism, translanguaging and syncretic language practices.

As early as 2001, in his introduction to the essay collection A New World Order, Caryl Phillips predicted a reconfiguration of planetary communication ‘in which there will soon be one global conversation with limited participation open to all, and full participation available to none’, and concluded that ‘in this new world order nobody will feel fully at home’. Echoing this sense of global homelessness, Anthony Appiah discussed the cosmopolitan obligation to (mostly unknown) others in his Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a World of Strangers (2006), while Ottmar Ette mused about ‘literatures without a fixed abode’ in Writing-between-worlds (2016). Arguably, English today also finds itself in ‘a world of strangers’: it has become a globally desirable medium of aesthetic expression and matters of political expediency, even for writers from traditionally non-anglophone parts of the world such as Latin America, East Asia or the Arab World. On the other hand, the grand notion of an ‘anglophone world’ is internally eroded by multilingual cultural configurations across the globe as well as by a revival of vernacular literatures in Africa or on the Indian subcontinent.  This new dispensation arguably confronts Anglophone Studies worldwide with the challenge to address the specific role of English as both a global and local medium of expression and social interaction. It also necessitates a self-reflexive reappraisal of established disciplinary protocols in cultural and literary studies as well as linguistics: how helpful are these routines for coming to terms with what Arundhati Roy has called the ‘mind-bending mosaic’ of language politics – and practices – in the contemporary world in her recent essay “What is the Morally Appropriate Language in Which to Think and Write?” Click here to read more

Keynote Speakers and Writers
  • Arundhati Roy
  • Kim Scott (Curtin University)
  • Patrice Nganang (Stony Brook University)

Conference convenors: Dr. Pavan Kumar Malreddy and Prof. Dr. Frank Schulze-Engler, Institute for English and American Studies, Goethe University Frankfurt

Practical information

Call for Applications: 13th Annual Black Europe Summer School: Interrogating Citizenship, Race, Ethnic Relations 
 



About the Course

The overall goal of this course is to examine the contemporary circumstances of the African Diaspora (and “other” immigrants of color) in Europe. We focus on and discuss the origins of Black Europe and investigate the impact of these legacies on policies, social organizations and legislation today. This course begins with a historical overview of the African Diaspora in Europe that traces the involvement of European nations in the colonization of the Americas. We address the migration and settlement of Blacks in Europe, and examine immigration and citizenship laws that regulated their settlement. We also look at anti-discrimination laws as they have arisen in various European countries. We compare the history of regulation and management of race and ethnic relations and the discourse surrounding the concept of Blackness and self-identification. Historically, social forces and social movements within Europe have given rise to policies to combat racism. We trace the chain of events following social and civil conflicts that prompted these policies and analyze the legislative and intellectual discourse produced in the aftermath. In addition, we explore notions of Blackness as official categorization; as a social construction employed by the dominant groups to indicate (non) belonging; as a Diaspora living within Europe; and as a contestation of the dominant (White) paradigm. In this way, we examine the social mobilization of Blacks to resist domination.The above issues are considered in light of the immediacy of contemporary global and European forces, including competing issues and discourses on Islamophobia, increased non-Black migration into and across Europe, and the debt crisis in the European Union. To read more click here.


​Who should apply?
  • Advanced undergraduate and graduate students in relevant disciplines 
  • Post-doctoral candidates already engaged or seeking to engage work related to Black Europe and the African diaspora;
  • Junior faculty from all over the world;
  • Professionals with MA degrees already working or interested in working in education, government institutions, NGOs, corporations
  • High school teachers and university professors;
  • Policy workers seeking deeper understanding of factors shaping citizenship and inequality;
  • NGO professionals working against xenophobia in Europe​

Practical Information
  • Date: 21 June - 3 July, 2020
  • Location: Amsterdam
  • Deadline for applications: 1 February, 2020
Other Upcoming Events (conferences, lectures, films and events)

A One-day Inaugural Symposium for the new 'Postcolonial Europe Group'

University of Kent, 2 November, 2019

To mark the launch of the new ‘Postcolonial Europe Group’, there will be a whole day symposium on 2nd November 2019 at the University of Kent, with contributions from scholars, activists and artists from the UK, Netherlands, Denmark, Italy, and Malta.

At a time when Europe is being questioned culturally and politically, there is a need to re-think its significance. Adopting a postcolonial lens, this event will bring into the spotlight a different map of Europe that is not solely shaped by its colonial legacy but also by different dynamics of subalternity, conditions of un/belonging, cultural, economic and geographical displacement.

The event will bring disciplines and fields together to re-think critically and creatively the significance of Europe. It will focus particularly on a number of contested conjunctural spaces: from Europe’s Southern frontiers to its inner cities. The interventions will be followed by a round table discussion centred on the objectives of the network, and a talk by artist Agnese Purgatorio.

Speakers include:

  • Professor Lars Jensen (Roskilde University): ‘Writing Postcolonial Europe’
  • Professor Sandra Ponzanesi (Utrecht University): ‘Phantoms of Europe: Intellectual Legacies and Cultural Transitions in Postcolonial Europe’
  • Dr Norbert Bugeja (University of Malta): ‘The Edge(s) of Memoir in an Ageing Europe: Postcolonial Notes’
  • Professor Miguel Mellino (Università degli Studi di Napoli L’Orientale): ‘Policing The Refugee Crisis: Neoliberalism between Biopolitics and Necropolitics’
  • Dr Paula McCloskey (University of Derby) and Dr Sam Vardy (Sheffield Hallam University): ‘The Eile Project; a place, of their own’
  • Dr Maria Ridda (University of Kent): ‘Remaking Europe from its Lawless Frontiers’
  • Agnese Purgatorio (artist): ‘The Immobile Nomad’

University of Kent, Peter Brown Room, 2nd of November 10:30 am.

Register here. The event is free but places are strictly limited and will be allocated on a first-come first-served basis.

For more information contact the symposium organiser, Maria Ridda: m.ridda@kent.ac.uk

                                                                                                       
Practical information

  • Date: 2 November 2019                                                                               
  • Location: Peter Brown Room, Darwin College, University of Kent, Canterbury
  • Contact: m.ridda@kent.ac.uk

Publications

Necropolitics 

Achille Mbembé


In Necropolitics Achille Mbembe, a leader in the new wave of francophone critical theory, theorizes the genealogy of the contemporary world, a world plagued by ever-increasing inequality, militarization, enmity, and terror as well as by a resurgence of racist, fascist, and nationalist forces determined to exclude and kill. He outlines how democracy has begun to embrace its dark side---what he calls its “nocturnal body”---which is based on the desires, fears, affects, relations, and violence that drove colonialism. This shift has hollowed out democracy, thereby eroding the very values, rights, and freedoms liberal democracy routinely celebrates. As a result, war has become the sacrament of our times in a conception of sovereignty that operates by annihilating all those considered enemies of the state. Despite his dire diagnosis, Mbembe draws on post-Foucauldian debates on biopolitics, war, and race as well as Fanon's notion of care as a shared vulnerability to explore how new conceptions of the human that transcend humanism might come to pass. These new conceptions would allow us to encounter the Other not as a thing to exclude but as a person with whom to build a more just world.


Publication Date: October 2019
Publisher: Duke University Press 
ISBN: 978-1-4780-0651-0

Link to publishers page here.

Failure 

Arjun Appadurai and Neta Alexander 

Failure explores the deeply troubling paradox by which the more technological and financial systems fail us, the more dependent on them we become. Wall Street and Silicon Valley—the two worlds this book examines—promote the illusion that scarcity can and should be eliminated in the age of seamless “flow.” Instead, Appadurai and Alexander propose a theory of habitual and strategic failure by exploring debt, crisis, digital divides and (dis)connectivity. What kind of failures do finance and technology perpetuate and monetize? What does failure have to do with memory and the structural production of ignorance? Moving between the planned obsolescence and deliberate precariousness of digital technologies and the ""too big to fail"" logic of the Great Recession, they argue that
the sense of failure is real in that it produces disappointment and pain. Yet, failure is not a self-evident quality of projects, institutions, technologies or lives. It requires a new and urgent understanding of the conditions under which repeated breakdowns and collapses are quickly forgotten. By looking at such moments of forgetfulness, this highly original book offers a multilayered account of failure and a general theory of denial, memory, and nascent systems of control.


Publication Date: November 2019
Publisher: Polity
ISSN: 9781509504756

Link to publishers page here.

Waste Siege

Sophia Stamatopoulou-Robbins 

Waste Siege offers an analysis unusual in the study of Palestine: it depicts the environmental, infrastructural, and aesthetic context in which Palestinians are obliged to forge their lives. To speak of waste siege is to describe a series of conditions, from smelling wastes to negotiating military infrastructures, from biopolitical forms of colonial rule to experiences of governmental abandonment, from obvious targets of resistance to confusion over responsibility for the burdensome objects of daily life. Within this rubble, debris, and infrastructural fallout, West Bank Palestinians create a life under settler colonial rule. Sophia Stamatopoulou-Robbins focuses on waste as an experience of everyday life that is continuous with, but not a result only of, occupation. Tracing Palestinians' own experiences of wastes over the past decade, she considers how multiple authorities governing the West Bank—including municipalities, the Palestinian Authority, international aid organizations, NGOs, and Israel—rule by waste siege, whether intentionally or not. Her work challenges both common formulations of waste as "matter out of place" and as the ontological opposite of the environment, by suggesting instead that waste siege be understood as an ecology of "matter with no place to go." Waste siege thus not only describes a stateless Palestine, but also becomes a metaphor for our besieged planet.


Publication Date: December 2019
Publisher: Stanford University Press 
ISSN: 9781503610897

Link to publishers page here

The Arc of Protection 

Alexander Aleinikoff and Leah Zamore 

The international refugee regime is fundamentally broken. Designed in the wake of World War II to provide protection and assistance, the system is unable to address the record numbers of persons displaced by conflict and violence today. States have put up fences and adopted policies to deny, deter, and detain asylum seekers. People recognized as refugees are routinely denied rights guaranteed by international law. The results are dismal for the millions of refugees around the world who are left with slender prospects to rebuild their lives or contribute to host communities. T. Alexander Aleinikoff and Leah Zamore lay bare the underlying global crisis of responsibility.The Arc of Protection adopts a revisionist and critical perspective that examines the original premises of the international refugee regime. Aleinikoff and Zamore identify compromises at the founding of the system that attempted to balance humanitarian ideals and sovereign control of their borders by states. This book offers a way out of the current international morass through refocusing on responsibility-sharing, seeing the humanitarian-development divide in a new light, and putting refugee rights front and center. 


Publication Date: October 2019
Publisher: Stanford University Press 
ISSN: 9781503611429

Link to publishers page here

Special Issue: Syrian Migration
 

Guest Editors: Donya Alinejad and Saskia Baas

Crisis Mag: Revisiting Europe's Migration "Crisis" 
N.1 (October, 2019)

About the Issue
Syrian migration is perhaps the most pressing displacement phenomenon of our time. Yet few political progressives in Europe have engaged seriously with its reasons and consequences. This issue of Crisis Magazine brings together a range of expert perspectives that reveal the deeper dynamics behind Syrian migration. We aim to develop a new political narrative from the Left as a response to the limiting frame of “the migrant crisis.”


CRISIS Mission
CRISIS aims to critically examine the causes and wider implications of what has been called the “migrant crisis” by giving voice to soundly informed, politically progressive perspectives about its various manifestations, both in European politics and in migrants’ lives and countries. We are inspired by the etymology of the term, crisis – from the ancient Greek, krisis: a turning point that calls for decisive judgement. We see this moment as calling for deep re-examination of what solidarity, internationalism, and human dignity mean to us, today. CRISIS will invite relevant scholars, thinkers, organizers, activists, and artists to make contributions toward informing and sparking debate among a Left wing-oriented, politically progressive audience. Consolidated efforts will be made to include contributions by thinkers from the global periphery, women, and minorities.


With contributions from: Yassin Al-Haj SalehSamer AbboudSune Haugbolle, Thomas PierretLeila al-Shami,  Gerasimos Tsourapas, Ilse van LiemptRima Dali, and Esmee van Schuppen, Nitzan Shoshan

Publication Date: October 2019
Publisher: Crisis Mag

Link to the Issue

Special Issue // Sexual politics between the Netherlands and the Caribbean: Imperial entanglements and archival desires

 

Edited by Gianmaria Colpani and Wigbertson Julian Isenia
Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies 

22.2, 2019

What does it mean to look for queerness in colonial, anticolonial, and postcolonial archives?2 What can these archives tell us about formations of queer desire and sexual politics across times and places? And what can queerness tell us, in turn, about colonial domination, struggles for decolonisation, and the configuration of postcolonial societies? Equally important, what investments come to shape our work when a search for queerness orients our mining of colonial, anticolonial, and postcolonial archives? The essays collected in this special issue offer some answers to these questions by discussing the place of sexual politics in the colonial and postcolonial relations between the Netherlands and the Caribbean. In order to do so, they draw on postcolonial studies, cultural studies, feminist and queer theories, as well as current debates on the archive taking place across these fields

With contributions from: Chelsea Shields, Naomie Pieter, Inez Blanca, Nella van den Brandt

Publication Date: June 2019
Publisher: Tijdschrift voor Genderstudies 
Launch Event: 12 November, 2019 (Amsterdam) 

Link to the issue
Link to Launch

FKW 66 // Taking Positions on the ‘Refugee Crisis’: Critical Responses in Art and Literature
 

Liesbeth Minnaard und Kea Wienand

Zeitschrift für Geschlechterforschung und visuelle Kultur
Nr.66 (2019)

The recent rise in migratory movements to the European Global North and the simultaneous increase in attempts to forestall this immigration has resulted in numerous images and narratives that try to capture and mediate the happenings at Europe’s borders. Many of these representations render the actors involved in these migratory movements suspect, and present those happenings as beyond our control. At the same time, however, representations of flight and illegalized migration have been accompanied by discussions about their appropriateness, their moral justifiability and the diverse ways in which they are being mobilized. Part of these discussions, that not only take place in the fields of art and literature, but also in popular culture and public media, is the search for more ‘critical’ approaches to the topic; a call for new grammars and alternative imaginaries that avoid the criminalizing discourse on terrorism and threat, and that escape the pitfalls of the “overarching trope of victimhood.” The question at stake in this issue of FKW is what counts as critical in our current situation? What does a critical position actually entail in a Europe that emphatically stages itself as ‘in crisis’ and as at loss with its identity?

With contributions from: Sabine Nielsen, Claire E. Jandot, Sven Seibel, Janna Houwen, Martha Bouziouri, Sarah Beeks

Publication Date: September 2019
Publisher: Jonas Verlag Kunst & Literatur 

Link to publishers page.


Vacancies

Assistant Professor in 1) Digital Media Theory and Practice and 2) Information and Media Policy and Law
Western University
Deadline: 15 October 

Assistant Professor - Critical Race Theory and Media - Department of Film & Media
University of California, Berkeley
Deadline: 18 October 

Postdoctoral Researcher “Social Citizenship and Migration"
Leiden University 
Deadline: 21 October 

Assistant Professor – Women’s and Gender Studies (Critical Race Studies)
Carleton University
Deadline: 31 October 

Assistant Professor of African and/or African Diasporic and/or Latinx and/or Latin American History of Art, Visual, and/or Material Culture, post-1750
University of Southern California
Deadline: 1 November 

15 LMU RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS to excellent early career researchers
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich
Deadline: 12 November


The activities of the PCI are organized in collaboration with The Graduate Gender Programme and Institution for Open Society (Hub Gender and Diversity)

 
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Postcolonial Studies Initiative · Muntstraat 2A · Utrecht, 3512EV · Netherlands

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