Capitalism and Insecure Positions of Minorities. Racism, Antisemitism, and Antigypsyism seen through the Lens of Materialist Critique (GER/ENG)
Workshop on November 4 and 5, 2024 at Justus-Liebig-University as part of the Collaborative Research Center "Dynamics of Security", the Political Theory Colloquium and the GGS-Section "Human Rights and Democracy".
With contributions by Christine Achinger | Francesco Arman | Randi Becker | Floris Biskamp | Martin Dornis | Lukas Egger | Magdalena Freckmann | Felix Kronau | Ulrike Marz | Tobias Neuburger | Anne Peiter | Helge Petersen | Jill Pöggel | Julian Prugger | Jan Rickermann | Leo Roepert | Roman Thurn | Stefan Vennmann | Moritz Zeiler
English Panel on Institutional Racism and Antigypsyism within Neoliberal Politics on November 4 at 4 pm.
Organization: Dr. Laura Soréna Tittel | Anna-Sophie Schönfelder | Max Waibel |
Hannes Kaufmann | Prof. Regina Kreide
Program:
Please register via e-mail by October 28, 2024 to: anna-sophie.schoenfelder[at]sowi.uni-giessen.de
--- Theorizations of social marginalization and exclusion place minorities in a position of insecurity in two respects: On the one hand, the actual insecurity of their positions in society is a starting point for research and a phenomenon to be explained. On the other hand, minorities are also insecurely situated within the theories used in social sciences. The workshop will focus on theoretical approaches that analyze racism, anti-Semitism, and antigypsyism against the background of capitalist dynamics. Such approaches are strong in that they explain the insecure positions of minorities in the context of material, social structures rather than attributing them solely to prejudice. They show how the ideological localization of minorities in specific positions within capitalist society, for example as “exploitable blacks”, “backward Muslims”, “money-grubbing Jews” or “begging gypsies”, legitimizes the fact that people are exposed to the pressures of expanding capitalist value on unequal terms. Yet what is striking about current capitalism-critical theorizing on anti-Semitism, racism, and antigypsyism is that the analyses of the different ideologies are largely detached from one another, they become blind to the other ideologies, or even reproduce them. It is all too easy to overlook the fact that members of all minorities can find themselves in precarious and insecure social positions. The workshop aims at generating a constructive counter-dynamic by providing a forum for discussion on how different theories of marginalization and exclusion of minorities that are critical of capitalism can enrich each other. In order to do justice to anti-Semitism, racism, and antigypsyism as specific forms of domination and ideology, they need to be examined separately. At the same time, however, it is also necessary to look at them together in order to work out their differences and relate them to capitalism. Therefore, the project is complex. All the more reason for the three fields of research to reflect on each other's methodological premises and findings. However, the epistemological potential of such mutual enrichment has hardly been exploited to date. In most contributions on Racial Capitalism, which focus on concrete social hierarchies and their effects on the material living conditions of racialized people, the topic of anti-Semitism does not appear. In some cases, simplified explanations of Racial Capitalismeven make use of anti-Semitic stereotypes. There are also anti-Semitism researchers who, following early critical theory of the Frankfurt School, for example, attempt to understand their subject matter as a ramification of the capitalist form of society, and attribute it to a misguided, personalized critique of capitalism. This often leaves social inequality along racialized lines underexposed. In the shadow of these discussions is the relatively new field of materialist antigypsyism research. In German-speaking research contexts, perspectives from both the subject-theoretical analysis of anti-Semitism and Marx's critique of capitalism have been incorporated here. Such theories of antigypsyism complement anthropological and prejudice-related approaches, but have so far been little developed. The workshop aims at exploring ways in which capitalist forms of accumulation and subjectivation can be taken into account in order to adequately theorize the particularities of anti-Semitism, racism, and antigypsyism. |
Date: November, 4th+5th, 2024
Location: Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen Margarete-Bieber-Saal, Ludwigstraße 34,
Follow this link to find the Call for Papers. |
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