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[Black Europe]

This workstream challenges the presumption of whiteness as the norm in the study of Europe. The ÐÂÏã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹ûEuropean Institute is developing it with academic leads Hélène Neveu-Kringelbach and Jeff Bowersox.

Workstream Rationale

Our workstream [Black Europe] results from the recognition that academic work specifically dedicated to the study of Europe is still to a considerable extent focused on experiences or marked by presumptions of whiteness as the norm. There is excellent, discipline-spanning work on race, racialisation and postcolonialism across many departments at UCL, as well as outstanding work on European history, politics, economics, humanities and law. However, there is a critical need to address – explicitly – the lacunae, prevailing assumptions and biases of research on Europe, and to challenge the institutional dimensions flowing from them.

Highlights and resources

FestivalFestival in June 2024ÌýÌý
This festival celebratedÌýBlack cultural production and critical inquiry and soughtÌýto explore the structures that make Blackness seem natural, self-evident, and variously foreign across Europe.

Revisit the programme


Black Central Europe
Black Central Europe

This rich website and international network of historians -Ìýof which Jeff Bowersox is managing editor and chief contributor - 'argue[s], quite simply, that Black people have always been a part of Central European history'.


black studies lib guide
Black Studies resources in the SSEESÌýLibrary collections

The contribution of the School of Slavonic and East European Studies' Library’s to the Black Studies LibGuide aims to highlight the increasing interest in researching race, racism and the black diaspora in the context of Slavic and East European Studies.

Videos and podcasts


Morcashani
Hearing Ghosts: The Life & Times of Josephine Morcashani

Video short by Graham RiachÌýintroducing the international music hall star of the late 19th and early 20th Centuries, relating her to the conditions for Black British performance artists today.

Watch


Bowersox Talking Europe
African-American entertainers in pre-jazz Europe

In this Talking Europe podcast, the historian Jeff Bowersox takes us to Central Europe around 1900, where the response to the arrival of Black American entertainers both confirmed and disrupted ideas of race and culture.

Listen


Meet the intern
Olivia Scher

Olivia Scher is the Project Intern supporting [Black Europe].

Read her profile

​​​Seminar seriesÌý

Mayur Deshpande

Damani Partridge:ÌýBlackness as a Universal Claim, 16 October 2023

HansÌýKundnani:ÌýEurowhiteness,Ìý20 November 2023

Rachel Jean-Baptiste:ÌýMultiracial Identities in Colonial French Africa: Race, Childhood and Citizenship, 5 December 2023

Mame-Fatou Niang:ÌýFrench but not (Q)White: Defining Frenchness for the 21st Century: Prof. Mame-Fatou Niang, 27 FebruaryÌý2024

James Mark:ÌýWilson's white world: the foundation of Central-Eastern European nation-states after World War I, 12 March 2024

Aissatou Mbodj-Pouye: An Adress in Paris, 16 May 2024


black europe collage

Black Europe Workshop

Opening workshop featuringÌýBea Gassman:ÌýThe 'ideas' of Africa: Four storiesÌý&ÌýJeff Bowersox:ÌýPerforming Blackness for Germans,Ìý13 March 2023

Academic leads

Our aims

  • Academically, we want to support conceptual and empirical work on the constructions of race, nationhood, modernity, and their entanglements in Europe; on the legal, intellectual, cultural, artistic, and economic legacies of European colonialism and the slave trade; or on how ethnic and racial identities are shaped by, and indeed shape ideas of, Europe. This will include the task of revisiting central analytical concepts we are employing, encouraging discussion and collaboration across disciplinary borders.
  • Structurally, we want to explore formats of engagement in an academic environment marked by an ever-increasing workload, which balance the need for focused actions with the ambition to create an open, unforced space for interaction and keeping an open mind as to outcomes. Alongside working to advance established academic formats – a speaker series, publications, teaching development, and grant applications – we want to offer an ongoing exploratory space and create synergies among academics from across the college, and beyond.
  • Institutionally, we want to leverage insights from this cluster of expertise to inform conversations on ÐÂÏã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹ûas an institution, specifically the way it organises research and teaching on Europe. From questions of peer development (and particularly support for ECRs) to supporting UCL’s commitment to hire 50 Black academics by 2024 and contributing to initiatives to decolonize curricula, the [Black Europe] cluster will also seek to develop good practice for the study of Europe at UCL.

Our partners

We are grateful for the support and partnership from theÌýÐÂÏã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹ûInstitute of Advanced Study, theÌýÐÂÏã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê¿ª½±½á¹ûSchool of European Languages, Culture and Society, and theÌýCentre for Migration and Diaspora Studies atÌý.

The workstream is part of our 2023-26 Jean Monnet Centre of ExcellenceÌýprogramme, co-funded by the Erasmus+ programme European Union.

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