Decolonisation and Feminisms. Frankfurt Summer School 2020 Gender Studies Track

Decolonisation and Feminisms. Frankfurt Summer School 2020 Gender Studies Track

Veranstalter
Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main Cornelia Goethe Centrum für Frauen- und Geschlechterforschung
Veranstaltungsort
Goethe-Universität Campus Westend
Ort
Frankfurt am Main
Land
Deutschland
Vom - Bis
03.08.2020 - 28.08.2020
Deadline
30.04.2020
Von
Lucas Schucht

We would like to cordially invite you to apply to the Gender Studies track ‘Decolonisation and Feminisms’ of the International Frankfurt Summer School 2020, organized by the Cornelia Goethe Center and GRADE Center Gender at the Goethe University in Frankfurt.

The Gender Studies Track of the Summer School is separated into two modules which will take place from August 3 to August 16 ('Feminist Movements, Practices and Experiences of Decolonization') and August 17 to August 28 ('De/Postcolonial Feminist Theory and Activism'). You can choose to apply for both modules or for either of them individually. The seminars will be held in English and the general program also includes excursions and study tours as well as an optional German language course.

The applications are open for advanced Bachelor Students and Master Students from Germany and abroad until April 30, 2020. Scholarships and travel grants are available.

If you have any questions or inquiries regarding the application or organization process please contact summerschool@em.uni-frankfurt.de. More information can also be found on the official website of the summer school.

Programm

Decolonisation and Feminisms

Description

The political debate about the restitution of objects removed from the colonies and exhibited in European museums is in full swing. Decolonizing knowledges, cultures and policies, socialities and practices, decolonizing power relations in general are an urgent concern of global justice. Feminisms around the world emphasize that these are crucial political and epistemic questions. A critical reflection upon processes of ‘othering’ and disappropriation seeks to understand how coloniality is embedded in political and social structures and how experiences and perceptions of modernity are shaped by colonial heredities. Raising awareness for exclusionary practices includes self-reflection within emancipatory movements. Bearing this in mind decolonial feminist theory analyses unequal, intersecting power relations and brings forward solidarities and policies to overcome these inequalities.

Program

Feminist Movements, Practices and Experiences of Decolonisation
(Module I, 03-14 August)

- Examine Germany’s history of colonialism and migration and its influence on contemporary society and politics.
- Learn about feminist and decolonial struggles in different geographical contexts and the transnational connections between them.
- Learn how gendered dynamics, relations and representations have significantly shaped and structured the projects of German and European enslavement, colonization and empire.
- Discuss current expressions of right-wing extremism on a local and global scale from an intersectional perspective.
- Work with original texts such as Orientalism (1978) by Edward Said and discuss the use of Orientalism in Anti-Muslim Racism in contemporary discourses.
- Develop an interdisciplinary theoretical framework to investigate the relationship between decolonisation, feminism and cultural politics; investigating arts and culture with a feminist and decolonial framework; engaging and discussing with local museum workers in Frankfurt.

De/Postcolonial Feminist Theory and Activism
(Module II, 17-28 August)

- Analyse the variety of approaches and concepts within decolonial feminisms and discuss prominent concepts such as intersectionality, coloniality, necropolitics and others.
- Situate the so-called ‘refugee crisis’ and analyze it from a decolonial-feminist standpoint.
- Participate in a tour that addresses historical and contemporary references to the colonial on a local scale for stimulating a debate about the history of colonialism and its ongoing consequences in the urban landscape
- Learn about Critical Theory and the legacy of the Frankfurt School and critically engage with it from a feminist and decolonial framework; get to know an initiative at the Goethe University that aims to decolonize the curriculum and embed feminist perspectives.
- Discuss transnational feminist movements and organizations and learn about different geographical contexts that shape the ‘politics of location’
Investigate the entanglement between politics and religion

https://summerschool.uni-frankfurt.de
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Sprach(en) der Veranstaltung
Englisch
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