1,018 research outputs found

    Diane Abbott, misogynoir and the politics of Black British feminismā€™s anticolonial imperatives: ā€˜In Britain too, itā€™s as if we donā€™t existā€™

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    The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.This article argues that it is remiss to understand the acute intensification of White supremacist politics in contemporary Britain without paying close attention to how this racism is inherently gendered and sexualised. This will be discussed in relation to the gendered racism of ā€˜misogynoirā€™ as experienced by the British Member of Parliament Diane Abbott. The article uses Shirley Anne Tateā€™s powerful analysis of the Sable-Saffron Venus in the English imaginary to argue that forms of British, and more explicitly English, national identity have been worked out on the back of systemic efforts to erase the material and epistemic presence of Black women in Britain from the British body politic. It further argues that the politics of erasure extends to the epistemic elision of Black British feminist theorising within the field of social theory. What then are the consequences and interplay of both the lived and epistemic acts of violence? I explore these issues by mapping Black British feminismā€™s anticolonial politics to argue that we should bring this tradition to bear in our analysis of this most recent iteration of racism in our contemporary times

    Classification of Incorporeal Movables

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    The politics of loving blackness in the UK

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    Can ā€˜loving blacknessā€™ become a new discourse for anti-racism in the UK and the broader black diaspora? This thesis will critically assess the concept of ā€˜loving blackness as political resistanceā€™ as outlined by the African American feminist bell hooks (1992). The thesis will show the ways in which blackness has been both negated and denigrated in western cultures and thus constructed in opposition to notions of love and humanness. Conversely, love and blackness are also rehabilitated in different ways by Black diasporic populations in Britain through the transnational space. The transnational space can provide opportunities for constructing, networks of care, love and anti racist strategies that affirm the value of blackness and Black life. However, the transnational space can also be fraught with risks, dangers and exclusions providing Black and migrant populations with uneven forms of citizenship and belonging to western neo-liberal states. Loving blackness within a transnational context can help to create a dynamic space to affirm blackness against racial exclusions and dominations whilst providing a lens to suggest alternative ways of being human

    ā€˜Each one teach oneā€™ Visualising Black intellectual life in Handsworth beyond the epistemology of ā€˜white sociologyā€™

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    The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version. The Publisher's final version can be found by following the DOI link.Handsworth, a suburb in north-west Birmingham, became an important generative epistemic location that produced a number of contested discourses on race and racism in Britain during the 1970s and early 1980s. Using archival sources, this article will focus on Handsworth as an important epistemic space where white sociological studies on ā€˜race relationsā€™ converged and diverged with the counter-hegemonic political activism of the African Caribbean Self-Help Organisation (ACSHO). This group of young Black working class Pan-Africanists in Handsworth were the coordinating committee for a national delegation of activists who attended the Sixth Pan African Congress in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania in 1974. Their activism in Handsworth was further captured by the photographer, Vanley Burke. Burkeā€™s photography and archive not only engages with the politics of creating alternative cites of knowledge production, they also enable us to map, trace and reconstruct some of these important sites of Black intellectual life in Britain

    Unforeseen Covid Impacts on Indianapolis Traffic

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    COVID has impacted traffic volumes, travel patterns, and even trip generation across our country. This session will explore COVIDā€™s impact on Indianapolis traffic and how to address it. Weā€™ll demonstrate how impacts differ in urban areas and depend on adjacent land use, adjusted work schedules, socio-economic forces, and transit access. Weā€™ll compare Indianapolis to national trends and conclude with open discussions regarding future TIAs and the potential permanency of adjusted travel patterns

    Let\u27s Talk About Death: Use of Euphemistic Language in the Medical Context

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    https://openworks.mdanderson.org/sumexp23/1031/thumbnail.jp

    Conspiracy Theories and Political Affiliation

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    For this study, we are addressing whether an individual who is more extreme in their political ideation is more likely to have a conspiracy mindset than individuals who identify as more moderate. We hypothesize that as political extremism increases among individuals, the likelihood of having a conspiracy mindset also increases compared to those who are more moderate. To test this prediction, we incorporated two preexisting questionnaires to gather information on political ideation and conspiracy beliefs

    Hearing the Voice of Medical Students Worldwide

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    The Student Forum, a new section of PLoS Medicine, is a space where medical students from across the world can exchange ideas about the critical issues affecting health and health care from their unique perspectiv
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