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Showing posts from September, 2019

Here's to the "both sides" White people: Your Whiteness is part of the toxicity

In what is a watershed moment in Communication Studies, recent conversations on what constitute diversity and excellence have created an opening for articulations of the problem of racism in the discipline. That Communication Studies as a discipline has historically operated on and reproduced racist norms emerged as the site of organizing. The long-hidden racist codes of the discipline, which so many of us at the margins struggled against and were all too aware of in our individual struggles, became visible. The intuition that disciplinary and sub-disciplinary awards, modes of recognition, and pathways for progress are racist was crystallized in the sudden-visibility of documents that have otherwise been hidden behind opaque structures and processes meant to evaluate merit. The normative constructions of Whiteness that are systematically written into the everyday structures of the discipline, tucked away under the polite language of diversity and inclusion, were rendered vis

Race, coloniality & free speech: Special Section of First Amendment Studies

Special Section of First Amendment Studies Race, coloniality & free speech Guest Editors: Anjali Vats and Mohan Dutta Full manuscripts Due: January 20, 2020 In this special focus on “Race, Coloniality, and Free Speech” in First Amendment Studies we seek 2,500-3,000 word manuscripts that interrogate the racial and colonial structures that animate free speech, including connections between free speech and Whiteness and the ways in which these connections are deployed in academia to protect and perpetuate racist hate. We also invite submissions that theorize frameworks for resisting the Whiteness of free speech.  We are particularly interested in essays that push us to think about the intersections between race, coloniality, and free speech differently, using new and evolving theories drawn from critical race studies, ethnic studies, cultural studies, decolonial theory, and so on, at a national and/or international level. While we welcome critical legal perspectives o

Totalitarian regimes, committees of inquiries, and corruption

(Note: The generalizable threads in this piece can apply to a wide range of totalitarian power operating globally. The consolidation of totalitarian power as a global trend often works under the veneer of fighting corruption, as we see in the recent instance of the rise of fascist totalitarianism of Bolsonaro in Brazil through the elite deployment of techniques of fighting corruption) Totalitarian power consolidates its control and keeps intact its power through a variety of techniques of disciplinary performance. These disciplinary techniques of performance are given the appearance on the surface of a commitment to cleanliness, of good governance. You hear terms such as "clean governance," "transparency," and "accountability," that prop up the regime's disciplinary techniques as methods to monitor, control, and check corruption. The articulation of corruption becomes a communicative tool that is deployed by power, as the rationale for fo