Time: 6.15pm - 7.45pm
Venue: G06, Roberts Building, UCL, Torrington Place, London WC1E 7JE
Price:
£10 and £5 students; free for registration with KU staff or student email.
Speaker(s): Samir Gandesha is Director of the Institute for the Humanities at Simon Fraser University, Vancouver.
4th Gillian Rose Memorial Lecture
Over the past two decades, identity politics has exercised a startling influence within progressive circles in the Anglosphere both within the university and the broader public realm. Moreover, it has been taken up into the agendas of putatively liberal and nominally social democratic parties. During Hilary Clinton's presidential campaign, for example, she repeatedly used the term ‘intersectionality'. However, the concept of identity politics is still widely misconstrued. This lecture reflects on the origins and conceptual and political meanings of the idea. It poses the question, ‘Is identity politics best viewed as embodying a genuine dialectic of emancipation, or as what, in her 1996 collection Mourning Becomes the Law, Gillian Rose called an aporetic "paradox of empowerment"?' Put differently, does identity politics aim at fundamental social transformation or does it more simply represent a shift in what we might call the ‘organic composition' of elites within capitalist societies?
The lecture will be followed by a reception at the October Gallery, 24 Old Gloucester Street, London WC1N 3AL
This event is generously supported by the Tom Vaswani Family Educational Trust.
Booking is essential to attend this event.
For further information about this event:
Contact: Professor Peter Osborne
Email: p.osborne@kingston.ac.uk
Directions to G06, Roberts Building, UCL, Torrington Place, London WC1E 7JE :