Changing Institutions: Common Sense, Complaint and Other Lessons in Legacy

Changing Institutions: Common Sense, Complaint and Other Lessons in Legacy

Feminist Thinking Series 2024: Sara Ahmed| 9 May, 2-4PM | Lecture Theatre 2, English Faculty, St Cross Building

By Feminist Thinking Seminars

Date and time

Thursday, May 9 · 2 - 4pm GMT+1

Location

Lecture Theatre 2, St Cross Building

St Cross Building Oxford OX1 3TJ United Kingdom

About this event

Limited tickets will be available at the door.


Event description

In my book, On Being Included: Racism and Diversity in Institutional Life, published over a decade ago, I explored how diversity is used by institutions as a way of appearing to doing something. The appearance of change can be a form of resistance to change. And yet, diversity is increasingly framed as forced change, an ideological imposition, or as compelled speech. Given these attacks on diversity and equality initiatives, it might seem that it is time to abandon our critiques of what diversity is not doing. One of my aims in this lecture is to show how these critiques give us the tools to explain and challenge what is going on. I will draw on two projects: the first on complaint; the second on common sense. For the former, I spoke to academics and students who had made or considered making complaints about abuses of power and inequalities within universities. I am now working on a new book A Complainer’s Handbook: A Guide to Building Less Hostile Institutions, in which I pull out the significance of this research for an understanding of institutional change. I will also draw on a new project on common sense. Common sense is increasingly appealed to as a legacy, an alternative to “wokeism,” and as an argument against institutional change.

This event space is wheelchair accessible. Hearing loop is available and there are infrared systems in lecture theatres and seminar room.


Speaker bio

Sara Ahmed (she/her) is an independent queer feminist scholar of colour. Her work is concerned with how power is experienced and challenged in everyday life and institutional cultures. She has just published her first trade book, The Feminist Killjoy Handbook with Penguin. Previous books (all published by Duke University Press) include Complaint! (2021), What's The Use? On the Uses of Use (2019), Living a Feminist Life (2017), Willful Subjects (2014), On Being Included: Racism and Diversity in Institutional Life (2012), The Promise of Happiness (2010) and Queer Phenomenology: Objects, Orientations, Others (2006). She is currently writing A Complainer’s Handbook: A Guide to Building Less Hostile Institutions and has begun a new project on common sense. She blogs at feministkilljoy.com. You can find her on twitter @SaraNAhmed and Instagram @SaraNoAhmed.


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