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Call for Papers

"Global Civil Rights"
3rd Annual Conference 2008
Scholars in Critical Race Studies (SCRS),
University of Memphis
Memphis, TN (USA)
27-28 March 2008

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The Scholars in Critical Race Studies (SCRS) at University
of Memphis seek submissions for their third annual
colloquium. In commemoration of the fortieth anniversary of
Martin Luther King's murder in Memphis, the topic this year
is on "Global Civil Rights." The keynote speaker this year
is internationally renowned critical race theorist David
Theo Goldberg. Please send all inquiries or proposals to:
[email protected]

The deadline for 250-500 word abstracts of 30-minute papers
is 13 January 2008. Selected papers will be published in the
journal "Patterns of Prejudice."

Scholars affiliated with the SCRS examine the historical
evolution and contemporary expression of race as a social
category for discriminating, organizing, regulating and
maintaining social differences. By revealing that racial
categories emerge in specific contexts that are connected to
power, politics, economics and culture, these scholars
destabilize those categories as natural or transhistorical.
The point is to disclose how race operates in differing
situations and texts, in order to undermine the force of
racism. The SCRS is an interdisciplinary forum that seeks to
facilitate a conversation by scholars across the humanities
and social sciences, including Philosophy, Literature,
History, Foreign Languages, Political Science, Sociology,
Anthropology, and Jewish Studies.

This colloquium was made possible by the generosity of the
Marcus Orr Center for the Humanities, the Benjamin L. Hooks
Institute for Social Change, Bornblum Judaic Studies, and
the College of Arts and Sciences at The University of
Memphis.

Submissions are welcome in the following categories, however
the suggested topics below are by no means exclusive. We
particularly welcome contributors from the Mid-South region
(Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana, Missouri, Alabama,
Georgia, Kentucky, Arkansas):
- The global community and the beloved community
- Jewish responses to apartheid and to civil rights
- Expressions of and responses to racism within material and
  intangible heritage
- Politics and ideation of a post-racial state
- What are the influences of national struggles for civil
  rights on global claims to civil rights?
- The influence southern U.S. Civil Rights Movement on
  activist groups in other locales
- The influence of other activist movements on the southern
  U.S. Civil Rights Movement, the role of race in
  contemporary civil rights struggles globally
- Defining or narrating "civil rights" in other national
  contexts
- Transnational dialogue or collaboration among activist
  movements


Contact:

Joshua Gorman
The University of Memphis
Department of History
Email: [email protected]

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