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Call for Publications

Theme: Kant, Race, and Racism
Subtitle: Understanding and Reckoning
Publication: Rivista di estetica
Date: Issue 3/2024
Deadline: 30.6.2023

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This special issue is scheduled to appear in 2024, the 300th
anniversary of Kant’s birth. We believe that it is important to
continue to address Kant’s account of race and his racist remarks
even during this important celebration year.

The issue of race appears at various points in Kant’s writing.
Famously, he dedicated three texts to developing a theory of human
races in 1775, 1785 and 1788. But it also surfaces in many other
texts, both published and unpublished during his life. In many of
these writings, Kant clearly accepts a hierarchical ordering of the
races, where white Europeans go on top. This ordering is further
backed by racist remarks on people of color that are scattered
throughout his corpus.

Kant’s remarks on race have been a subject of scholarly debate for a
long time. Recently, the issue gained broader attention, especially
in Germany, in the aftermath of the renewed “Black Lives Matter”
movement that emerged after the killing of George Floyd. In the past,
scholars tended to address the problem by taking one of two opposed
sides. One was to call into question Kant's moral and political
theories in light of his racist views (Charles Mills, for instance,
called for a radical revision of those theories). The other was to
register those views as reprehensible but set them aside as mere
personal prejudices that do not affect Kant's core philosophy at all.
However, it is not enough simply to acknowledge that Kant held racist
views. Nor is it clear that there is any non-question-begging way to
insulate the supposed "core" of Kant's philosophy from those views.
We need to explore all the ways in which Kant’s views on race may be
integral to his entire philosophical system.  Furthermore, if it
turns out that “race” is more central to Kant’s thought than
previously assumed, we need answers to the question of how to reckon
with the effects of his race thinking.

We welcome submissions that discuss Kant's theory of race and his
racist views along those lines.

Submissions should be written in English and prepared for blind
review. They must not exceed 45,000 characters (approx. 7,000 words),
including notes, bibliography and blank spaces. The evaluation will
follow a triple blind process. Neither the reviewers nor the advisory
editors will be informed about the identity of the authors.

In order to submit your paper, please register and login to:
http://labont.it/estetica/index.php/rivistadiestetica/login
 
Please note: when asked “What kind of file is this”, select the
relevant CFP.

Deadline:
June 30, 2023

Advisory Editors:
Gabriele Gava (University of Turin)
Huaping Lu-Adler (Georgetown University)
Achim Vesper (Goethe University Frankfurt)
 
Mail to:
redazionerivistadiestet...@gmail.com


Journal website:
http://labont.it/estetica/index.php/rivistadiestetica/






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