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Postgraduate "Work In Progress" Seminar

Postgraduate Work-In-Progress Seminar

A weekly seminar for Philosophy postgraduates to present their in-progress work, followed by a well-spirited trip to the pub for food and drinks.


Useful Info

The WIP provides a risk-free and supportive space for postgraduates to present their work and receive feedback from other graduates and faculty.

  • When: Every Thursday (5pm to 6:15pm)
  • Where: Room S1.50 (Social Sciences Building, First Floor)
  • What: 30-minute presentation, followed by Q&A.

Attendance optional but highly recommended. All postgraduates are welcome to present or attend -- whether MA, MPhil, PhD, Visitors, etc.


馃搮 Format


  • Presentation: 30 minutes
  • Open Discussion / Q&A: 30 minutes
  • Material: Anything, really -- assessed essay (for MAs), a supervision essay (for MPhils), or a thesis section (for PhDs), ...
  • Style: Flexible -- slides, handouts, or simply talking.
  • Audience: No prior reading or background knowledge expected. Visiting PhDs should can present.

馃 Should I present? ("I have nothing to present; I hate public speaking; etc.")


  • Are you a postgraduate? Then yes, you should present.
  • In other words, all graduates are encouraged to present at least once.
  • The WIP is a unique opportunity for graduates to develop their public speaking / writing skills, take risks, test out theses, and get constructive feedback from peers.*
  • Presentations need not (in fact, should not) be watertight or polished pieces at all. You are encouraged to present work at all stages of the writing process -- first drafts, substantial sets of notes, etc.
  • Simply signing up for a date is a great way to give yourself a deadline to work towards. (This is what most people do.)
 
NEXT TALK

Ignacio Pe帽a Caroca

(PhD)

Consent


Thursday 07/05/2026

5pm - 6:15pm

S1.50


ORGANISERS

Tiago Rodrigues

Lucas Menezes 

   

 

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CRPLA Seminar: Michael Thomas (Amsterdam), 'Towards a Social Aesthetics of Race'

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Location: R0.03 (Ramphal Building)

The works of W.E.B. Du Bois, James Baldwin, and Audre Lorde have been canonized as sources for anti-racist education in higher education. In this context, their works are commonly interpreted through the lens of an essentialist understanding of racialized experience and analyses of racism that bifurcate between racism as a psychological problem of ignorance or biases and as a structural problem generated by institutional powers that organize the actions of individuals. This lecture addresses this phenomenon by offering an interpretation of the works of Du Bois, Baldwin, and Lorde as models for Black thought built by translating their experiences into literary forms that reflect their own processes of shaping their mentality to intervene in racial modernity. It views these forms as grounded in an understanding of an aesthetic philosophy of race that theorizes how the racial fictions used to justify racist institutionalized habits draw upon and reinforce forms of racial sensibility that naturalize racist domination. I argue that attention to the forms of their work allow us to map their models of thought to develop forms of analyzing racism that resist the bifurcation into its psychological and structural dimensions through a focus on how these two levels interact in felt experience. In addition, their respective work on racial feeling provides a foundation for an aesthetic philosophy of race that synthesizes work in Black Aesthetics, Black Existentialist Phenomenology, Black Political Philosophy, and the Critical Philosophy of race through a theory of racial sensibility that offers epistemic and political alternatives beyond integrationist paradigms.

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