Whiteness as a Spectre in Space? The Case of Post-Apartheid Cape Town
Overview
Speaker: Danielle Isler
Danielle Isler is a social scientist from Zurich and is currently completing her doctorate at the University of Bayreuth on “Black Subjectivities and Whitened Spaces in Post-Apartheid Cape Town.” She has taught as a lecturer at, among others, the University of Basel, the University of Bern, the University of Zurich, the Bern University of Applied Sciences, the University of Cape Town, and Humboldt University in Berlin. Alongside her academic work, Danielle Isler is active in anti-racism education: she facilitates workshops, delivers lectures, and provides consulting services to promote greater inclusion and social equity in society. She is also a curator, artist, and musician
South Africa continues to be a country where racial segregation is more often the rule than the exception, with Cape Town ranking among its most racially segregated cities. The city is also frequently associated with Whiteness. Yet what is Whiteness? Where is it located, how can it be observed, and how does it manifest spatially? This talk examines Whiteness as an ideology that is both produced through space and inscribed within it - an ideology that operates on a global scale and simultaneously shapes and is shaped by political subjectivities. Focusing on the context of Post-Apartheid Cape Town, the analysis draws on Derrida’s concept of the spectre (Derrida 1993) to explore Whiteness as both a ghostly presence and a spectrum. It further considers how Whiteness haunts spatial formations and how, in turn, it is haunted by the colonial past in Post-Apartheid Cape Town
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Highlights
- 1 hour
- Online
Location
Online event
Organised by
FASS, The Open University
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