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Call for Papers

Theme: Race and Islam
Subtitle: Global Histories, Contemporary Legacies
Type: International Conference
Institution: Ali Vural Ak Center for Global Islamic Studies, George
Mason University
Location: Fairfax, VA (USA)
Date: 23.–25.3.2022
Deadline: 15.10.2021

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The Ali Vural Ak Center for Global Islamic Studies at George Mason
University will convene an international conference on Race and Islam
to be held from March 23rd through 25th, 2022 on its campus in
Fairfax, Virginia. The conference aims to treat the subject through a
set of broad, cross-disciplinary conversations exploring the full
range of intersections between race, Islam, and Muslim experience. We
invite paper proposals from all disciplines across the social
sciences and humanities; all time periods, historical and
contemporary alike; and all geographic and cultural contexts globally.

Recent events in the United States have led to a renewed focus in
public discourse on the socially embedded legacies of race and
racialization. These legacies, however, are byproducts of a much
broader global history — one moreover in which Islam has had a
consistent role and presence. Race, racism, and racialization have
been problematized, defined, and redefined in changing contexts by
multiple subject positions, and simultaneously articulated,
confronted, and absorbed across various media, institutions and
communities. The intersectionality of race with constructs of gender,
justice, equality, freedom, faith, ethnicity, and identity has
refocused attention on race as a defining theme of academic research,
political deliberation, cultural production, and public discourse.

Islam as a faith tradition, both in its historical and contemporary
manifestation, has been intricately intertwined with the question of
race. While Islam has been subject to objectification and
racialization, the lived experiences of Muslims reflect a mixture of
indigenous, historical, and modern adaptations of racial categories.
The conference, therefore, aims to explore not just how Islam —
either scripturally or culturally — responds to questions of race, as
has often been done, but also the ways Islam, as a faith tradition,
has encountered, engaged with, and reflected particular
understandings and experiences of race (not least of all through
Islam’s own history with racialized slavery). Cognizant of recent
processes through which Muslimness has become subject to
racialization, one of the underlying questions of the conference will
be how being or becoming a Muslim has been defined and constructed
vis-à-vis particular racial discourses and praxes.

Applicants are encouraged to address one or more of the following
focal themes of the Conference:

- Race in Islam's scriptural tradition
- Conceptualizing race in the literature of the formative period in
  Islamic history
- Black and White in Islam's historical experience with slavery
- Media racialization of protest movements in and from the Muslim
  world
- Black-Muslim politics of the Mahjar
- Afro-Arab and Nubian literature: past, present and future
- Race and Islamophobia in Europe and the West
- Race and gender in the construction of slave societies in the
  Islamic world
- Anti-racist activism in the Muslim world
- Minorities and racism in the Muslim world
- Refugees, migrants, and racism
- Racism against Muslims in media and social media
- Wars on terror and racism against Muslims
- Education, knowledge-production, and racism 

The conference organizing committee particularly welcomes submissions
and participation from junior scholars engaged in original research
with strong publication prospects. The Center plans to publish short
versions (appr. 2000 words) of conference papers on The Maydan, its
flagship Islamic Studies digital publishing platform, as part of a
special thematic series. Other contributions may be featured through
the Maydan Podcast, a family of four thematic streams, one of which —
On the Square — has an explicit focus on race and Islam in the
Americas.

If you are interested in presenting a paper at the conference, please
submit a title & abstract (between 200-400 words) along with CV to
Ayşenur Sönmez Kara (asonm...@gmu.edu) as a single PDF file. We
encourage applicants who do not have a record of prior publications
to also submit an example of previous academic writing.

Key Dates

Submission of Proposals: October 15, 2021
Notification of acceptances: November 15, 2021
Submission of full papers: February 15, 2022


Contact:

Ayşenur Sönmez Kara
Ali Vural Ak Center for Global Islamic Studies
George Mason University
4400 University Drive, MSN 1H3
Fairfax, VA 22030
USA
Phone: +1 703 993-5400
Email: asonm...@gmu.edu
Web: https://islamicstudiescenter.gmu.edu/events/12490





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