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Summerschool CT: Racial Capitalism - Detailseite

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Grunddaten
Veranstaltungsart Hauptseminar Veranstaltungsnummer 51056
Semester SoSe 2025 SWS 2
Rhythmus keine Übernahme Moodle-Link  
Veranstaltungsstatus Freigegeben für Vorlesungsverzeichnis  Freigegeben  Sprache englisch
Belegungsfrist Es findet keine Online-Belegung über AGNES statt!
Veranstaltungsformat Präsenz

Zugeordnete Person
Zugeordnete Person Zuständigkeit
Jaeggi, Rahel, Professor, Dr.
Studiengänge
Abschluss Studiengang LP Semester
Bachelor of Arts  Philosophie Kernfach ( Vertiefung: kein LA; POVersion: 2014 )     -  
Bachelor of Arts  Philosophie Zweitfach ( Vertiefung: kein LA; POVersion: 2014 )     -  
Bachelor of Arts  Philosophie/Ethik Zweitfach ( Vertiefung: mit LA-Option; POVersion: 2014 )     -  
Bachelor of Arts  Philosophie/Ethik Kernfach ( Vertiefung: mit LA-Option; POVersion: 2015 )     -  
Bachelor of Arts  Philosophie/Ethik Zweitfach ( Vertiefung: mit LA-Option; POVersion: 2015 )     -  
Bachelor of Science  Philosophie Zweitfach ( Vertiefung: kein LA; POVersion: 2014 )     -  
Bachelor of Science  Philosophie/Ethik Zweitfach ( Vertiefung: mit LA-Option; POVersion: 2015 )     -  
Master of Arts  Philosophie Hauptfach ( Vertiefung: kein LA; POVersion: 2014 )     -  
Zuordnung zu Einrichtungen
Einrichtung
Philosophische Fakultät, Institut für Philosophie
Inhalt
Kommentar

The term “racial capitalism” is increasingly used to insist that, as a matter of historical fact, industrial capitalism was built on the basis of colonialism and slavery, and that, as a matter of sociological fact, capitalist accumulation continues to operate through racial differentiation and hierarchization. In recent years, “racial capitalism” has attracted not only sustained theoretical attention, but it has also become an important reference point for radical social movements such as the Movement for Black Lives. It is not difficult to see why: race (just like gender) structures who can access jobs, wages, housing, credit, mobility across borders and other social goods; and being subjected to austerity, police violence, imprisonment, environmental hazards and health risks is in fundamental ways inflected by racism. Even if one recognizes the reality and indeed centrality of these phenomena to an adequate understanding of capitalism, however, it remains disputed whether, and if so how, the notion of racial capitalism can be systematically spelled out in ways that go beyond its often vague and undertheorized invocation.

In this summer school we will explore some of the central philosophical and socio-theoretical issues the turn to “racial capitalism” raises: Is the link between capitalism and racism historically contingent or necessary? If capitalism is necessarily racist, what makes it so? If race and gender are not accidental to, but constitutive of capitalism, how can the relation between class, race and gender be conceptualized in ways that also track their realignment in the current constellation? If, in the framework of racial capitalism, race is not primarily an identity but a structure of power, how does this impact our analysis both of capitalism and the movements that struggle against oppression and exploitation? And if the universal proletariat can no longer serve as the subject of revolutionary emancipation, what is the horizon for anti-capitalist struggles and transversal forms of solidarity today that can prevent emancipatory politics from splintering into a diversity of struggles that often remain at cross-purposes?


The summer school will involve plenary lectures and discussions, reading sessions, small group discussions and a public panel debate. We will explore how the link between capitalism and racial domination has been addressed in the Marxist tradition (in Marx’s own writings and those of Rosa Luxemburg) before turning to later approaches that in part depart from and in part reconstitute this tradition, such as W. E. B. Du Bois’s and Cedric Robinson’s historically informed analysis of how racial stratification came to be constitutive for the development and stability of capitalist societies and Stuart Hall’s analysis of how racial capitalism generates its own internal contradictions and various forms of resistance to it. Tommie Shelby, Inés Valdez, Robert Gooding-Williams and Manuela Bojadžijev join us as instructors and present their own work on racial capitalism.


To apply for participation, graduate students and junior scholars are invited to submit a précis of their take on core issues in the debate on racial capitalism and a CV (max. 1 page per document). The précis should show which particular background knowledge and systematic positions the applicants would contribute to our joint discussions. Please submit your application in a single PDF document and make sure that the title of your precis summarizes its content.

 

Deadline for applications: April 16th, 2025

Please apply by using the form provided on our website:

https://criticaltheoryinberlin.de/summer_school/international-summer-school-in-critical-theory-2025-racial-capitalism/

Instructors:

Tommie Shelby (Harvard University)

Inés Valdez (Johns Hopkins University)

Robert Gooding-Williams (Yale University)

Manuela Bojadžijev (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin)

and

Rahel Jaeggi (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin)

Robin Celikates (Freie Universität Berlin)

Christian Schmidt (Humboldt Universität zu Berlin)


For updates and information see also:

http://criticaltheoryinberlin.de/summer-school/

Strukturbaum

Die Veranstaltung wurde 10 mal im Vorlesungsverzeichnis SoSe 2025 gefunden:

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin | Unter den Linden 6 | D-10099 Berlin