Skip to main content

New Histories of Racialization and Resistance – a Conversation

When:
Venue: Online

No booking required

How we memorialise and study the past is being questioned today in new ways. The global reverberations of the Black Lives Matter protests of the summer of 2020 and the growing demands to ‘decolonise’ knowledge from within and without higher education challenges anyone who seeks to engage with a contentious present and troubling past, and to consider its implications for us as teachers, students and political beings.

Responding to this moment, and mindful of our overlapping commitments to traditions of radical and politically engaged history, the Department of History, Classics and Archaeology, the Birkbeck Institute for the Study of Antisemitism and the Raphael Samuel History Centre have committed to an annual event to explore and reflect on histories of racism, racialization, and resistance. We have framed this inaugural event as a “conversation” because we are especially keen to bring into dialogue multiple perspectives on these histories.

The conversation between the four speakers will be chaired by David Feldman, Director, Birkbeck Institute for the Study of Antisemitism. The audience will have the opportunity to join the conversation in the Q&A that follows.

 

About the Speakers

Jacob Dlamini is an author, field guide and an Assistant Professor of History at Princeton University. His first book, Native Nostalgia (Princeton University, 2009), reflected on his own childhood under apartheid and his second book, Askari, won the 2015 Alan Paton Award for best South African non-fiction. In 2020, Dlamini published two books: Safari Nation: A Social History of the Kruger National Park and The Terrorist Album: Apartheid’s Insurgents, Collaborators, and the Security Police.

Alan Lester is a Professor of Historical Geography at the University of Sussex. He has researched British imperial governance, humanitarianism, Indigenous peoples' engagements with colonialism and settler-colonialism for over thirty years. His latest book is Ruling the World: Freedom, Civilisation and Liberalism in the Nineteenth Century British Empire with Kate Boehme and Peter Mitchell (Cambridge University Press, 2021).

Sadia Qureshi is a historian of racism, science and empire and a Senior Lecturer at the University of Birmingham. Her first book, Peoples on Parade (University of Chicago Press, 2011) explored the importance of displayed peoples for the emergence of anthropology. She also co-chairs the Royal Historical Society’s Race, Ethnicity & Equality Working Group, which produced the Society’s landmark report on racial inequalities in 2018.

Kristy Warren researches the social and political history of British colonialism in the Caribbean and the lingering legacies of this past in the region and wider diaspora. She is currently a Research Associate at the University of Leicester working on an ESRC-funded project, in collaboration with the University of Guyana, entitled 'Mental, Neurological and Substance Abuse Disorders in Guyana's Jails 1825 to the present day'.

The event is free but booking is essential. To book a place, click here.

--------

This event is co-organised by the Birkbeck Institute for the Study of Antisemitism, the Raphael Samuel History Centre and the Department of History, Classics and Archaeology, Birkbeck.

It is associated with the Department of History, Classics and Archaeology's Discover the Past events series, open to the public and students. To see the full list of events, visit the Discover the Past web page.

Contact name:

Contact phone: 020 3926 1840