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Call for Papers

Theme: Intersections of Whiteness
Type: International Conference
Institution: Ruhr-University Bochum
   Technical University Dortmund
Location: Bochum and Dortmund (Germany)
Date: 11.–13.1.2017
Deadline: 31.7.2016

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The protests against racial profiling and racist police brutality in
the U.S. and Britain, Donald Trump’s alarming comments about Muslims,
the Confederate flag controversy in South Carolina, the all-white
Academy Award nominations, the organization “Operation Black Vote”
feeling compelled to urge people of color not to leave the political
field to white people in the wake of the UK General Elections, the
reactions of the European Union to the masses of refugees and many
Europeans’ xenophobic reactions to those seeking refuge: the specters
of whiteness are still urgently haunting the western world.

According to France Winddance Twine and Charles Gallagher, Critical
Whiteness Studies is currently in its third stage, riding its third
wave so to say, questioning “the tendency towards essentializing
accounts of whiteness by locating race as one of many social
relations that shape individual and group identity” (2011: 3). While
the discipline has established itself as an anti-racist academic and
activist practice or mode of intervention, it is still often object
to scrutiny for spotlighting whiteness and thus possibly contributing
to the continuing dominance of whiteness. In order to dismantle this
dominance and to heed Steven Garner’s call for awareness of the
“pitfalls” of whiteness studies (2007), we believe it is necessary to
identify the intricacies of whiteness in western society and culture
from a decidedly transnational/global perspective.

The first waves of Critical Whiteness Studies established the
discipline as an almost exclusively US-centered field of inquiry
whose methodology and theory-building was consequently to a
considerable degree focused on US-American particularities, yet
whiteness has since the turn of the century become what Vron Ware
calls an “interconnected global system”: “it may be produced in one
place, but its effects are not containable by cultural or political
borders” (2001: 184).

This conference aims at making whiteness visible (following Richard
Dyer and Valerie Babb). We will do so by discussing the current
position of the field and concrete examples that negotiate whiteness
with a regional, national and global focus. We are especially
interested in the interplay of whiteness and other “social relations
that shape individual and group identity” and invite presentations
from cultural studies, gender studies, history, literary studies,
sociology, anthropology etc. Whiteness, while it is considered a
system of privilege, is informed and created by its intersections
with other categories of the self and society.

Questions we wish to explore, are: Is whiteness intersectional? How
is this intersectionality played out in different disciplines, in
different cultures, in different media? While the obvious
intersections between whiteness and class, gender, sexuality are very
productive, we wish to include questions of region, nation, ability,
the body, and religion.

Topics for presentations might include, yet are not limited to:

Whiteness and ...

- critical theory
- popular culture (including television shows such as Fargo, Sons of
  Anarchy, True Detective, Girls, Misfits, Being Human, but also film,
  music, reality television, etc.)
- comedy (e.g. American standup comedian Louis CK’s deconstructions
  of white male identity, South African comedian Trevor Noah and
  others)
- the nation (comparative perspectives: e.g. U.S. <=> U.K., England
  <=> Wales)
- the region (e.g. the American South, Eastern Germany, the English
  countryside)
- feminism (e.g. first- and second-wave, post-feminism, cyberfeminism)
- fatness, dis/ability, healthism
- Marxism
- queer identities
- social networks

Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words and a short
biographical info to the organizers Evangelia Kindinger and Mark
Schmitt at: intersectionsofwhiten...@gmx.de

The deadline for paper proposals is 31 July 2016. Speakers will be
notified of their acceptance by 1 September 2016.

Confirmed keynote speakers:
Amanda D. Lotz, University of Michigan
Katharine Tyler, University of Exeter
Vron Ware, Kingston University
Matt Wray, Temple University 

Organizers:
Evangelia Kindinger (Ruhr-University Bochum, American Studies)
Mark Schmitt (TU Dortmund, British Cultural Studies)

Contact:

Evangelia Kindinger and Mark Schmitt
Email: intersectionsofwhiten...@gmx.de
Web:
http://www.eaas.eu/conferences/other-conferences/intersections-of-whiteness




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