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Call for Papers

Theme: Philosophy of 'Race' and Racism
Type: International Conference
Institution: Faculty of Philosophy, University of Oxford
Location: Oxford (United Kingdom)
Date: 27.–29.6.2016
Deadline: 23.4.2016

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W. E. B. Du Bois famously wrote that "the problem of the twentieth
century is the problem of the color-line". All of us now are well
into the twenty-first century, and for contemporary Europeans, Du
Bois’ remarks may appear distant a second time over: off his spelling
of ‘color’ we can read his Americanness. And yet the problem Du Bois’
addresses here is (despite his spellings) our problem too, on either
side of the Atlantic, and beyond. Although his remarks on the
“color-line” are most commonly associated with ‘The Souls of Black
Folk’ and its concern with black life in the United States, he in fact
first offered them to a London audience at the first Pan-African
Conference, in a speech entitled “To the nations of the World”.  As
he puts it here, “the problem of the color-line” is the question as
to how far differences of race ... will hereafter be made the basis
of denying to over half the world the right of sharing to their
utmost ability the opportunities and privileges of modern
civilization”. Hence, Du Bois took this problem to be not only of
local, but, first and foremost, of global relevance and thus to
affect most of those who are non-white. In different locations,
however, the manifestations of this problem – that is, the contours of
racial categories, the social meaning associated with those
categories, and the pressing issues of racial injustice – may
nevertheless be markedly different.

In light of this, there is something of a lacuna in the emerging
literature on the  historically neglected philosophy of ‘race’ which
has seen a flowering of interest in the last twenty years: much of it
assumes, either tacitly or explicitly, an US-American audience, and
addresses the phenomena of race and racism primarily salient to a
distinctively US-American context. In order to help close this
lacuna, this conference aims to widen the conversation beyond the
context of the US. We thus seek both to increase our understanding of
race and racism in different global contexts, and to asses what the
contextual variability of race and racism tells us about these
phenomena.

We invite abstracts of 300-500 words for 30 minute papers addressing
race and/or racism. Priority will be given to papers that explore
these phenomena in global contexts other than the US, or that explore
the implications of their contextual variability. We also
particularly welcome work that engages with legacies of European
colonialism. Possible topics include the nature of racial
oppression/domination and/or structural injustice, the intersection
of racism with other forms of oppression (e.g. misogyny,
heterosexism, transphobia, ableism), the connections between race in
the academy and activist movements, the meta-philosophical
implications of accounting for race or racism, the metaphysics of
race, racial ideology and epistemologies of ignorance, and the
requirements of racial justice.

Submissions should be made via easychair by the 23rd of April:
https://easychair.org/conferences/?conf=porr16
We will let our decision be known by the 1st of May. For details
about the accessibility of the conference location, see the 'Access'
section of our website:
http://philosophyofraceandracism.weebly.com/access.html

Organisers

Rachel Elizabeth Fraser, University of Oxford
Daniel James, University of Konstanz
Katharine Jenkins, University of Sheffield/University of Cambridge
Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò, UCLA
Rey Conquer, University of Oxford


Contact:

Organising Committee
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://philosophyofraceandracism.weebly.com




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