__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Theorising Anticasteism
Type: Online International Conference
Institution: Department of English, Presidency University
Location: Online
Date: 7.–8.6.2022
Deadline: 30.4.2022

__________________________________________________


Casteism can be described, among other things, as a deep-rooted
prejudice that motivates and leads to caste-based atrocities and
discrimination against the ‘lower castes’ and outcastes (Dalits) of
the Indian subcontinent and Indian diaspora. Such discrimination is
multi-layered and is on the rise. As of 2020, every 10 minutes a
crime is committed against a Dalit and every day 8 Dalit women are
subjected to rape in India. Crimes against the Dalits include murder,
lynching, massacre, suicide, social ostracization, economic
exploitation, and sexual abuse. Multiple instances of caste-based
discrimination, specifically in the Indian diaspora of the USA and UK
(e.g. the incident at the BAPS temple, New Jersey; the CISCO case
etc.), confirm that casteism is not confined to the Indian
subcontinent and that, as apprehended by Babasaheb Ambedkar, caste
has indeed become a global problem. Remarkably, European Union has
repeatedly taken note of rampant casteism and has resolved to
eliminate caste discrimination. As summed up by Anand Teltumbde,
capitalistic modernity, the republican constitution, neoliberalism,
and globalisation, all have failed to prevent the persistence of
casteism.

The proposed conference on ‘theorising anticasteism’ sets out to
explore why casteism persists even in the 21st century, particularly
through a dual gesture of ‘unmasking the unethical operations of
caste’ (Meena Dhanda) and a critique of the history, strategies, and
achievements of anticaste movements. Both the terms ‘anticaste’ and
‘anticasteism,’ used without a hyphen but subject to debate, are
intended to be annotated and theorised at length. Anticasteism, at a
preliminary level, could be considered both as praxis and a critical
conceptual category. Theorising anticasteism simultaneously opens up
possibilities of interrogating the history and contemporaneity of
anticaste resistance and reformulating the problem of casteism at
material, ideological, sociological, philosophical, phenomenological,
psychological, clinical and artistic and representational levels. The
conference thereby aims at revisiting and expanding on the project of
‘annihilation of caste’ proposed by Babasaheb Ambedkar in 1936.

The works of Gajendran Ayyathurai (‘Critical Caste Studies’), Dhanda
(‘Philosophical Foundations of Anti-casteism’), Gopal Guru
(‘theoretical Brahmins and empirical Shudra’), Kancha Ilaiah
(‘Dalitisation’), Sushrut Jadhav (casteism as ‘psychological
ethnocide’), Balmurli Natrajan (‘culturalization of caste’), Shailaja
Paik (Dalit women’s ‘double discrimination’), Teltumbde (‘Theorising
Dalit movements,’ Caste atrocities as ‘India’s hidden apartheid’),
and Suraj Yengde (‘many shades of Dalits’), among others, can be used
as points of reference for those writing proposals for this
conference.

Papers are expected to fall within the following METHODOLOGICAL range:

- Close readings of casteist and anti-caste texts (literature, films,
  graphic narratives, popular culture, politico-philosophical works,
  and scriptures)
- Critical study of anticaste thinkers
- Analysis of specific cases of caste-based violence
- Historicising pivotal events of anticaste movements
- Key concepts in theorising anticasteism

Abstracts may address but need not be limited to the following TOPICS:

- Decolonization as debrahminization
- Anticaste leaders and colonial masters
- Diasporic casteism, global brahmanism
- Cultural and academic reproduction of brahmanism
- Casteism vis-à-vis nationalism
- Political parties, Dalit Phobia and Dalitphilia
- Phenomenology of casteism
- Psychologising casteism
- Biopolitics of caste
- Interrogating Dalit politics, rethinking anticaste resistance
- Interrogating caste-based identity politics
- Revisiting the laws and policies against casteism
- Defining ‘Ambedkarism’ and ‘Periyarism’
- Dalit historiography vis-à-vis postcolonialism, Marxism, and
  subaltern studies
- Dalit aesthetics as anticasteism
- Dalit feminism as anticasteism
- Anticaste activism
- Anticaste publishing
- Caste atrocities and comparative genocide
- Anticasteism and the counter-hegemonic religion and culture
- Intersectionality: anticasteism and antiracism; anticasteism and
  anticolonialism; anticasteism and LGBTQIA+ movements; anticasteism
  and feminism; and so on

Information for the participants:

- Abstracts: 400-500 words
- Deadline for the submission of abstracts: 30th April 2022
- Notification of acceptance of abstracts: 15th May 2022
- Bio-note (full name, designation, affiliation, research interests):
  100-150 words
- Abstracts with a title and a bio-note must be emailed to:
  [email protected]
- There is no registration fee but all speakers and participants must
  register online before 30th May 2022 by filling in a Google Form
  available here:
  
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSctyGyt15eRClHC2Eh_0LLIy--bK-36eWTv-v7QzAI5DQGidg/viewform?usp=sf_link

Convenor:
Dr Mahitosh Mandal, Presidency University, Kolkata, India

 
Contact:

Dr Mahitosh Mandal, Head
Department of English
Presidency University
Kolkata, India
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://presiuniv.ac.in/web/AnticasteismCfPFinal.pdf




__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
https://interphil.polylog.org

InterPhil List Archive:
https://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

__________________________________________________

Reply via email to