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Call for Papers

Theme: On the Matter of Blackness in Europe
Subtitle: Transnational Perspectives
Type: Transnational Symposium
Institution: Department of Black Studies, University of California,
Santa Barbara
Location: Santa Barbara, CA (USA)
Date: 4.–5.5.2017
Deadline: 20.3.2017

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The presence of Black people in Europe dates back to the early
medieval period. Since then, Black people in Europe have contributed
significantly to the archives of radical Black epistemologies in
various ways. Within this contribution, distinct points of departures
exist with regards to socio-historical conditions and divergences of
anti-blackness in European nation states. However, academic
scholarship on the articulations and formations of Blackness in
Europe have gained more attention in the last decades. Recently, the
multiplicities of European Blackness (as ontology, identity, and/or
alignment) are often subsumed under the framing of “Black Europe.”
The attention given to this area of study is due in part to the
resistance of Black people rendered non-citizen within Fortress
Europe, urban insurrections in the aftermath of police killings of
Black youth in Paris and London—as well as other cities in European
countries—mobilizations against anti-black imagery, and
representations in public spaces such as those against Zwarte Piete
in the Netherlands.

The symposium “On the Matter of Blackness in Europe: Transnational
Perspectives,” which will take place at the University of California,
Santa Barbara 4-5 May 2017, aims to trace the articulations of
transnational Black solidarities and struggles for Black lives in the
European context by foregrounding less explored paradigms of Black
formations, creations, improvisations and Black struggles throughout
Europe and beyond, putting a focus on the multiplicities of what has
become taken for granted in contemporary discussions of “Black
Europe.” With the aim of dismantling the homogeneity of the Black
transnational experience in European contexts while simultaneously
attending to how the various struggles for Black lives unfold, we
will engage with lived experiences of Blackness and Black political
struggles in various European contexts and geopolitical dynamics.
Further, the symposium will interrogate the power relations at work
within academic scholarship that determines what becomes
monolithically referred to as “Black Europe.”

This call is for junior scholars, early career researchers, and/or
independent researchers to present and discuss their respective
research projects, either on panels or on roundtables to enact
intergenerational, transnational and collective discussions. We
invite proposals for papers and roundtable presentations that address
any of the following:

- What can Blackness mean in/for Europe?
- How have contemporary contributions to the transnational
  continuations of the Black radical tradition been brought to bear in
  various European contexts?
- How do various Black struggles unfold in the face of genocidal
  border regimes, urban policing and surveillance, neoliberal
  austerity policies and the current rise of right-wing extremism and
  Islamophobia?
- What geographies and elements of Blackness or Black diasporic
  identity are privileged in European discourses and how can we
  unsettle these asymmetries?
- How do marginalized experiences of Blackness within Europe,
  especially the interventions of Black Muslims, LGBTQI*, and/or those
  rendered non-citizen (e.g., refugees or asylum seekers), challenge
  one-dimensional conceptualizations of Blackness. How can we be more
  accountable in centering them?
- Which kind of Black aesthetics, creative formations and
  emancipatory poesis are challenging the colonial legacies of Europe?
- How does Blackness shape and reconfigure space and how is Black
  place-making maneuvered alongside the intersectional lines of
  postcolonial urbanism?
- How do the politics of Black Lives Matter travel to and depart from
  these contexts? What can BLM mean in contexts that do not
  meaningfully contend with “race” as a recognized category of
  difference and subordination?

Please send an abstract (300 words) including affiliation and a short
bio by 20 March to Vanessa Thompson and SA Smythe at:
blacknessmatterseur...@gmail.com


Contact:

SA Smythe and Vanessa Thompson
Department of Black Studies
University of California, Santa Barbara
South Hall
Santa Barbara, CA 93106-3150
USA
Email: blacknessmatterseur...@gmail.com




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