When:
Friday, April 12, 2024
4:00 PM - 5:30 PM CT
Where: 555 Clark Street, 555 Clark Street , Evanston, IL 60208 map it
Audience: Faculty/Staff - Student - Public - Post Docs/Docs - Graduate Students
Contact:
Phil Hoskins
(847) 491-3864
Group: Critical Theory
Category: Academic
A lecture by
ROBIN CELIKATES
Freie Universität Berlin
In recent years, the concept of structural racism has become an object of often heated semantic and political struggles. Especially in the German debate, hostility to the concept is also linked to epistemic obstacles that keep the debate from moving beyond a focus on discrete racist acts, prejudice and ‘xenophobia’. These obstacles have, in part, also shaped how racism was thematized, or rather: remained largely unthematized, in Frankfurt School critical theory. Nevertheless, an account of the structural nature of racism can profit both from insights articulated in recent anti-racist struggles and from earlier work in the critical theory tradition and its resolutely socio-theoretical focus. I suggest that both perspectives need to be brought together to account for the fundamental ambivalence of structural racism as both a total social fact and a fragmented totality traversed by (political and epistemic) contradictions and struggles.
Robin Celikates is Professor of Social Philosophy at Freie Universität Berlin, co-director of the Center for Social Critique Berlin and currently a visiting scholar at MIT. Before moving to FU in 2019, he taught at the University of Amsterdam and was a Member of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton. He is a co-editor of the journal Critical Times: Interventions in Global Critical Theory (Duke UP) and publishes on critcal theory, migration and social movements (https://fu-berlin.academia.edu/RobinCelikates ). His books include Critique as Social Practice (2018) and the edited volume Analyzing Ideology (forthcoming).