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[Commlist] cfp: Europeanisation as Violence: RacializedModernities in the Global South and East
Mon Oct 11 08:40:22 GMT 2021
https://www2.helsinki.fi/en/news/society-economy/europeanisation-as-violence-racialized-modernities-in-the-global-south-and-east
Call for contributions
Since the end of the Cold War, Europe’s engagements with the
postcolonial and post-socialist worlds have been framed by a modernist
teleology: the promotion of a supposedly desirable march towards liberal
capitalism, democracy ad rights (Gille, 2010). Europeanization – the
process of becoming “European” by adhering to specific standards in
policies, economic relations and societal norms – has often been studied
as a technical-juridical endeavor in the mainstream social sciences. Yet
postcolonial and postsocialist studies have shown how “claims to proper
whiteness” as a marker of Europeanness are central to these processes
(Lewicki, 2020: 5; Krivonos, 2018), thus foregrounding the role of race
and racialization. Recent contributions in critical migration,
development and humanitarian studies, focusing on the relations between
Europe and the Global South, confirm these insights. Violence – both the
epistemic violence of development interventions and the very material,
if ambivalent, violence of borders and military interventions – features
prominently in these accounts (Lopez et al., 2015; Pallister-Wilkins,
forthcoming; Rutazibwa, 2014; 2019; Weizman, 2011).
This edited volume advances these debates by theorizing Europeanization
as violence. In doing so, we are interested not only in the “kinetic
force or physical violence” (Lopez et al., 2015) of European politics,
increasingly visible, for instance, in European Union (EU)-sanctioned
border enforcement. We also foreground forms of structural and epistemic
violence within the institutions, laws and technocratic apparatuses that
make up the “moral technologies” of development and humanitarian aid, as
promoted by European powers (Lopez et al. 2015: 2233). We thus
contribute to a growing body of work that theorizes the violence of
humanitarianism and liberal benevolence, by considering how imaginaries
of Europe and Europeanness are at play in them (Lopez et al., 2015;
Pallister-Wilkins, forthcoming; Rutazibwa, 2019; Weizman, 2011). In
particular, drawing on postcolonial, post-socialist and decolonial
approaches, we explore how these configurations of violence operate
through conceptions of Europeanness that are racialized and gendered. We
bring together contributions across disciplines including sociology,
development, geography, anthropology and international studies.
Our endeavor moves from recent research that invites us to a radical
re-thinking of the historical and imaginative geographies of Europe. In
the dominant social scientific imaginary, “Europe” continues to feature
as a homogenous geo-historical entity, an “unmarked category” (Boatcă,
2020) with supposedly stable and coherent borders. This discourse of
Europe-as-a-container leaves Europe’s internal geopolitics and
hierarchies, as well as a geographical displacement of European borders
undiscussed – or at least, like in the case of critical migration
scholarship, the latter is often discussed as a recent phenomenon. But
if post- and decolonial perspectives are taken seriously, Europe rather
emerges as a historical anomaly, with unacknowledged borders spreading
across the islands in the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans, North Africa,
as well as contested and contingent borders in the east of the continent
(Boatcă, 2020). We thus observe a double dynamic: contemporary borders
of Europe being spread across the globe through the project of European
colonialism, with Global “post-socialist” East being placed in a
perpetual catching-up position in relation to (western) Europe. And
while in recent decades, a bourgeoning amount of scholarly work has
started to explore the colonial project of Europe and its borders
(Grovogui, 1996; Bhambra, 2007; Hansen & Jonsson, 2014; Picozza, 2021),
this work has been uprooted from dialogues with the work on Eastern
Europe and post-socialism, which explored the struggles over definitions
of Europeanness in the East of the continent. Despite the land continuum
with Eurasia, “Europe” is often discussed as a given continent
(Dainotto, 2006). An imaginary of Europe as Western Europe is reproduced
when locating the East of Europe in the slot of “area studies” and
evacuating the East from the theoretical arguments on race, coloniality
and Europeanness. This dominant vision of the world continues to
reproduce the old “three worlds” meta-geography, which divides spaces
into either “postsocialist” or “postcolonial”.
In Europeanization as Violence, we argue that both the Global South and
the East, that is, both the post-colonial and post-socialist
perspectives are needed to examine the workings of Europeanisation as
violence beyond the typically imagined borders of Europe-as-container.
Following sociologist Manuela Boatcă’s work, we understand the spaces
beyond the imagined borders of Europe as “Forgotten Europes”.
Europeanization as Violence questions Eurocentrism from the perspective
of “forgotten Europes”. Drawing on scholarly work committed to
decolonization, we question teleological narratives of Europeanisation
as a gradual and steady process towards capitalism, freedom and
democracy. A supposed linear temporal progression elides what might be
better understood as an old space-time dynamic, in which non-Western
Others are already and forever located in the past, always arriving “too
late”, to borrow from Franz Fanon.
These constructions of humanity are inextricably racialised, that is,
placed at various distances from liberal humanity. This is why we place
race and racialisation at the centre of Europeanisation as violence.
Considering Europeanization as racial offers “a contrast from an
incessant focus on the logics of unqualifiedly racially repressive cases
such as the US, or South Africa”, that allow the reproduction of a
“European racial denial” that has made “ race in the wake of World War
II categorically to implode, to erase itself” (Goldberg, 2006: 333-334).
We locate out contribution in dialogue with recent work on colonialism
and social theory. This is the first volume to bring both the Global
South and East under the framework of “Forgotten Europes”. The edited
volume offers a critique of the epistemic hegemony of “core” European
metropoles, from which rethinking of Europe has taken place. The authors
of the edited volume speak from different positions in the context of
global epistemic inequalities.
Violence is one of the central concepts of the edited volume, which is
analytically paired with the notion of Europeanisation and European
modernity. Post- and decolonial work has importantly and extensively
argued that abstract promises of freedom obscure their embeddedness
within colonial relations of exploitation, bordering and coerced labour.
This work reminds us that the classic Eurocentric theorizing of the
state monopoly on the use of violence should be analytically understood
with the perpetration of violence by modern European states in the
colonies and in other non-European and non-Western settings at the same
time that European societies were being gradually pacified. The popular
and official narrative of the EU as a peaceful and benevolent project is
based on the “colonial amnesia”, such as the fact that the Treaty of
Rome was signed right in the middle of the Algerian War. If colonial
histories of Europe as a project – rather than that of individual
empires – are taken seriously, it becomes visible how violence is not an
aberration to Europe but a prerequisite for European modernity. The
volume takes these histories as a starting point for the epistemic enquiry.
As we theorise Europeanisation as violence, we remain painfully aware of
the growing challenge to critique the project of Europeanisation itself.
Increasing nationalist mobilisations across Europe and the co-optation
of “postcolonial thinking” by right-wing parties limit the space for
non-right-wing critique of Europeanisation. The limited engagement with
racism and violence at the core of the European modernity in the
dominant social scientific narratives offer little to challenge
right-wing racist discourses mimicking themselves as “anti-colonial”.
This makes the critique of Europeanisation as violence even more urgent,
as academic critique should not leave the space to rapid right-wing
responses.
We anticipate the volume to include 11-12 essays of up to 8,000 words
each, including references (following Chicago Style, in-text citation:
https://www.scribbr.com/chicago-style/author-date/).
We are seeking further contributions focusing on the following themes:
the EU, border violence and humanitarian violence in the Mediterranean
the EU Emergency Trust Fund for Africa
the role of the EU in perpetuating Israeli occupation and apartheid
EU-promoted development interventions in the East of Europe
Perspective contributors are invited to submit an abstract of no more
than 300 words and a short bio to the following addresses:
(Daria.Krivonos /at/ helsinki.fi) and (Elisa.Pascucci /at/ helsinki.fi).
Tentative timeline for the book project:
25 October 2021: Deadline for submission of abstracts by perspective
authors.
30 November 2021: Contributors notified about selected abstracts
31 January 2021: Editors circulate introduction + submission of book
proposal to publisher (Duke University Press or Manchester University
Press – preliminary inquiries to the potential publishers will be
submitted earlier in the autumn).
28 March 2022: submission of first chapter drafts
30 May 2022: Editors’ comments on first drafts
30 October 2022: Authors submit revised chapters
30 December 2022: Editors’ comments on revised chapters
31 February 2023: Authors submit second revisions
28 March 2023: Final checks and comments by editors
30 June 2023: Final copy-edited chapter draft (after 3rd round of
revisions if needed) and submission of manuscript to publisher.
References:
Bhambra, G. (2007) Rethinking Modernity: Postcolonialism and the
Sociological Imagination. Basingstoke: Palgrave.
Boatcă, M. (2020) Thinking Europe Otherwise: Lessons from the Caribbean.
Current Sociology 69(3):389-414.
Dainotto, R. (2006) Europe (In Theory). Durham and London: Duke
University Press.
Hansen, P. & Jonsson, S. (2014) Eurafrica: The Untold History of
European Integration and Colonialism. London, NY: Bloomsbury.
Gille, Z. (2010) Is there a global postsocialist condition? Global
Society, 24(1): 9–30.
Goldberg, D.T. (2006) Racial Europeanization. Ethnic and Racial Studies
29(2): 331-364.
Grovogui, S. (1996) Sovereigns, Quasi Sovereigns, and Africans: Race and
Self-Determination in International Law. Minneapolis: University of
Minnesota Press.
Krivonos, D. (2018) Claims to whiteness: Young unemployed
Russian-speakers’ declassificatory struggles in Finland. The
Sociological Review, 66(6): 1145-1160.
Lewicki, P. (2020) Struggles over Europe: Postcolonial East/West
Dynamics of Race, Sexuality, and Gender Intersections EEJSP 6(3): 4–12.
DOI: 10.17356/ieejsp.v6i3.771
Lopez, P.J.; Bhungalia, L. and Newhouse, L. (2015) Introduction:
Geographies of Humanitarian Violence. Environment and Planning A:
Economy and Space 47, pp. 2232-2239.
Pallister-Wilkins, P. (forthcoming) Humanitarian Geographies of
Whiteness: Entanglements of Race, Immobility and Care. European Journal
of International Relations.
Picozza, F. (2021) The Coloniality of Asylum: Mobility, Autonomy and
Solidarity in the Wake of Europe’s Refugee Crisis. Rowman & Littlefield.
Rutazibwa, O. (2014) In the name of human rights: the problematics of EU
ethical foreign policy in Africa and elsewhere Afrika Focus 27, 1, p. 96-101
Rutazibwa, O. (2019) What’s there to mourn? Decolonial reflections on
(the end of) liberal humanitarianism Journal of Humanitarian Affairs 1,
1, p. 65-67
Weizman E, 2011, The Least of All Possible Evils: Humanitarian Violence
from Arendt to Gaza (Verso, London; New York)
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