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Call for Papers

Theme: Troubling Seasons of Hate
Type: WiCDS 4th International Annual Conference
Institution: Wits Centre for Diversity Studies (WiCDS), University of
the Witwatersrand
Location: Johannesburg (South Africa)
Date: 5.–7.12.2017
Deadline: 20.10.2017

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The Wits Centre for Diversity Studies will host a conference on the
topic of “Troubling Seasons of Hate” on 5, 6 & 7 December 2017 at the
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.

Globally, it is becoming clear that we are in trouble. Humanity may
be on the brink of repeating some of the most destructive and
dehumanizing chapters of modern history as populist ethno-nationalism
gains currency, working to overturn many of the gains made by
anti-colonial, civil rights, feminist, disability and sexual minority
rights movements. Expressions of violence and exclusion directed
towards those constructed as racial, ethnic, religious, national,
sexed/gendered ‘others’ are gaining a level of respectability as some
political leaders and popular movements endorse inhumane and bigoted
attitudes and behaviors against those regarded as non-normative. The
dehumanizing effects of this rising tide of hatred are already
reverberating throughout our societies, with severe consequences for
the human dignity and safety of everyone, even those who deploy hate
in the face of difference. While overt acts of violence directed at
people because of perceived group belonging are often spectacularized
in the media, we seek to understand the quotidian permissions that
enable the trans/homophobia, racism, misogyny and more to circulate
and become diffused in society in the first place.

The fourth annual international conference hosted by the Wits Centre
for Diversity Studies wishes to trouble the insidious normalization
of hateful ways of being, speaking and behaving. The conference aims
to trouble the ways in which hate operates in societies globally,
interrogate how it is constituted, travels and circulates, its many
effects, and how we can prevent, limit and challenge its harm.

This conference invites proposals for 15-minute presentations
followed by moderated table discussions with conference delegates. We
are interested in reading proposals that trouble hate at all levels
and in all aspects of society. These may include:

- Normative social formations
- Social movements
- Identities
- Culture and arts
- Memory and memorialization
- Knowledge production
- Affective economies
- Bodies
- Faith, spirituality and religion
- Law and legislation
- Institutions
- Globalization and nativism
- Economic practices
- Civil society initiatives

The deadline for the submission of abstracts is 20 October 2017.

Abstracts should be between 250 and 300 words, and should be sent to
[email protected] by Friday, 20 October 2017, accompanied
by a brief CV.

Conference website:
http://www.troublinghate.com




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