Living through unexpected transformational conjunctions
Format: 
Lecture
Talk
Language: 
English
Online
15 July, 2021 - 6:15pm to 7:45pm

ZOOM Meeting

The 2020s constitute a period of global turmoil in which attempts to ‚build back better‘ will have to start from the recognition that it marked a period of unexpected transformational conjunctions. Movements to redress social inequities gained unprecedented recognition because COVID-19; the USA murder of George Floyd and climate change activism all forced inequalities into popular consciousness and enabled different accounts to be heard in mainstream media. These three issues were not unitary, but signifiers of complex, polyvalent issues that must be understood intersectionally. It is not surprising that already burgeoning theorisations of intersectionality were both taken up and disputed.

This lecture argues for the indispensability of intersectionality to understanding these issues and that these transformational conjunctions also help to move on theorisations and applications of intersectionality. It theorises the big picture that characterises inequalities in 2021 and the complexity of gendered inequalities in that picture. It punctuates that big picture with research examples from a range of research studies including transitions to motherhood for Muslim, white and black mothers, environment in the lives of families and boys and masculinities. The lecture will argue that such everyday examples are central to understanding the big picture of the polyvalence of gendered, racialised, ethnicised relations.

Speaker
Ann Phoenix
Concept: 
Bettina Kleiner, Helma Lutz, Marianne Schmidbaur
Coordination: 
Mandy Gratz
Contact: 

All interested parties are cordially invited. Registration for the webinar is required to participate.

We would like to thank our cooperation partners for their support of the event series!

Video recording of the second public lecture on 15 July 2021 on YouTube

The Angela Davis Guest Professorship for International Gender and Diversity Studies serves to promote international and interdisciplinary cooperation in the field of gender and diversity.

Prof Angela Davis is regarded as a pioneer in the global race-class-gender debate and as a pioneer of critical discourse within gender and diversity studies. Her perspective on overlapping forms of inequality based on gender, ethnicity and class has become part of social science theorising as triple oppression - or currently as the intersectionality approach.

Angela Davis was the first holder of the visiting professorship at the Cornelia Goethe Centre in 2013. Following its successful launch, the visiting professorship is filled at regular intervals by an internationally renowned researcher.