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Call for Papers

"Concepts of Race in the Humanities"
Multidisciplinary Conference
Bucerius Institute for Research of Contemporary German
History and Society, University of Haifa
Haifa (Israel)
26-28 October 2010

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Conference organizers:

Dr. Amos Morris-Reich, Bucerius Institute for Research of
Contemporary German History and Society at the University of
Haifa ([email protected])

Dr. Dirk Rupnow, Institute for Contemporary History at the
University of Innsbruck ([email protected])

In the decades following World War II, the Holocaust, and
decolonization, “race” slowly but surely lost much of its
legitimacy as a cultural, political and scientific category.
Nevertheless, for much of the 19th and the first half of the
20th century, concepts of race enjoyed widespread currency,
playing an integral role in numerous fields of knowledge, in
some cases even serving as an essential basis.

Race, a concept normally identified far more with biology,
genetics and anthropology than with the humanities, has
implications both biological and cultural. Accordingly,
since the mid-1980s, much critical historical work has been
undertaken to shed light on the role of race in these
fields. In particular, scholars in the field of anthropology
have done a great deal in recent years to expose the role of
racist concepts in its history and practice, as well as on
the connections between race and imperialism, and race and
power.

No organized study of similar scale has been attempted with
regard to the role of race in the history of the humanities.
On the surface, the very notion of Geisteswissenschaften or
humanities, with all their idealistic and humanistic
overtones, would seem fundamentally incompatible with the
history of prejudice, discrimination, and exclusion that one
typically associates with race. Yet from linguistics to art
history, musicology to religious and Bible studies, history
to literary studies, notions of race were present in the
history of the humanities, in a manner which crossed
disciplinary, cultural and national lines. Race has a
long-standing, deep-seated history in the humanities,
vestiges of which are still discernible in modern
scholarship.

At this conference, we intend to analyze different
disciplines and national backgrounds from a
multidisciplinary perspective, starting from the late 18th
century. Guiding questions for the papers may include: At
what point did notions of race surface in the humanities,
and where did they come from? What roles have they played in
various fields within the humanities, particularly with
regard to epistemic categories? Are there notions of race
that are specific to the humanities? Is the history of race
significant to the development of the humanities as a whole?
We also hope to draw comparisons, both conceptual and
genealogical: How do the humanities and natural sciences
differ? Are concepts of race biological or cultural in
nature? What is the relationship between notions of race in
the natural sciences and humanities, and have there been
points of mutual exchange of concepts, ideas, categories and
objects of research between the two fields? While these
questions must be addressed from a critical perspective, the
conference also aims to foster an empirical basis for
further research and discussion. Although the German case is
central to any such history, the conference will not focus
exclusively on German history, but will rather seek a much
broader context to account for the longer, broader history
and legacy of notions of race in the humanities.

The aim of this conference is to bring together both young
and established scholars from different countries and
different fields within the humanities to study and explore
the role of notions of race in different branches of the
humanities. The organizers hope to cover travel and lodging
for all participants. An edited work is expected to follow
the conference – not the conference proceedings per se, but
a work based on a selection of the papers presented. The
organizers plan to work with the authors to produce a
distinctive and coherent collection.

Please e-mail a proposed title for your paper, abstract
(max. 250 words/1 page) and short CV (max. 2 pages) to the
conference organizers listed above. Do not hesitate to
contact us with any questions. Proposals should be submitted
by September 15, 2009.


Contact:

Dr. Amos Morris-Reich
Bucerius Institute for Research of Contemporary German
History and Society
University of Haifa
Education Building, Room 646
Mount Carmel
Haifa, 31905
Israel
Fax: +972 (4) 8288282
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://bucerius.haifa.ac.il/

 
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