Mar 23, 2021
Troubling Epistemics and Postcolonialism
- 11:00 to 12:30
- Reading Group
- Dept. III
- Elizabeth Berman
In this session we will discuss the following texts dedicated to the politics of breathing that will be briefly introduced by Elizabeth Berman (Department of Social Sciences, HU Berlin):
[Provocation text]
Ito, A. (2021). "Aerocide: Asphyxial Politics." Academia Letters, Article 184, pp. 1-5.
[Complementary Readings]
Chen, M. "Masked States and the 'Screen’ Between Security and Disability”, Women's Studies Quarterly 2012, Vol. 40, No. 1/2, VIRAL, pp. 76-96. Mbembe, A. "The Universal Right to Breathe” https://critinq.wordpress.com/2020/04/13/the-universal-right-to-breathe/ Ahuja, N. "Intimate Atmospheres: Queer Theory in a Time of Extinctions." GLQ 1 June 2015; 21 (2-3): 365–385.
Contact and Registration
Everyone is welcome to join. For registration or any questions about the seminar please contact Marianna Szczygielska.
About This Series
"Troubling Epistemics and Postcolonialism" is a monthly reading seminar interrogating "postcolonial" as an analytic concept in the history of science. The goal is to understand the ethics and mechanisms of our own epistemic practices as they relate to politics and power. We aim to examine the ways that epistemology is both historically contingent and actively produced within the history of science with the goal of troubling our disciplinary positions. For each meeting we list and circulate
- a short ‘provocative text’ to carry the empirical element and to provoke us to go wider in attempting to attend to something that troubles. Everyone is expected to read that text
- two or three "theoretical" or descriptive papers that we feel might be useful in "attending to the trouble." These are optional readings. The idea is that everyone who attends the discussion will have read at least the short provocation paper and bring some "troubles" to the meeting