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Friday, December 12, 2025

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CSWG Seminar: "Ambiguities in Black: Black feminism and the transracialism discourse"
S0.20 (Social Sciences Building)

You are warmly invited to join us for a face to face seminar on

Ambiguities in Black: Black feminism and the transracialism discourse

featuring  (King's College London)

Abstract:

When Rachel Dolezal was 鈥渙uted鈥 as white during a local news television interview in 2015, a new social category exploded into popular cultural and academic discourses: transracial. This story – the scandalous demise of an NAACP Chapter President who identifies as Black whilst having been born to and raised by Caucasian parents – captured the public and scholarly imagination and precipitated a flurry of media and academic engagement with questions of identity fluidity and Black authenticity. Much of this work sets out to argue that Rachel Dolezal either is or is not Black, a debate that has often evolved into a broader consideration of whether it is possible to become Black. My research project, Ambiguities in Black, thus argues that the discourse about 鈥渢ransracialism鈥 is best understood as a struggle over our popular and scholarly definitions of Blackness. Responding to this struggle, I ask: what does this discourse that emerged in the wake of the Rachel Dolezal transracialism scandal do to ways of talking and thinking about Blackness?

This question of what Blackness is and how we might know whether someone is Black is long contested and of vital importance to critical race theorists and scholars of Blackness, as well as anti-racist political actors. By analysing the post-Dolezalian transracialism discourse, my project produces answers as to the assumptions and logics about racialisation and Black identities circulating and structuring this popular media and academic discussion, and the ways in which the discourse can be seen to complicate, alleviate, or exaggerate rising tensions in our cultural, political, and theoretical dialogue on racial identity.

Speaker Bio:

Alanah Mortlock is a Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in the School of Education, Communication and Society at King鈥檚 College London. Her current project seeks to put histories of Black British feminism in conversation with contemporary African-American Black Studies, and in particular the discourse of Black metaphysics. Her doctoral research, completed at the LSE Department of Gender Studies, analysed how academic and popular discourses of 鈥渢ransracialism鈥 interact with theorisations of Blackness, engaging a critical lens invested in Black feminist and trans scholarship and politics. Her research interests include Black (and) trans feminisms; theorisations of Blackness; racial liminality; theories and critiques of identity; Black anti-humanism; and feminist epistemologies and methodologies.

This event is free and open to all, but advance registration is required.

To register for a place, CLICK HERE.

Refreshments will not be provided, but you are very welcome to bring your lunch and eat it during the seminar.

If you have any questions about the event, please email cswg-events@warwick.ac.uk

If you have accessibility requirements or there are any adjustments we can make to support your full participation, you can let us know through the booking page above.

This event is being organised by the Black Feminist Thought Group and the Centre for the Study of Women and Gender

 

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CSWG Black Feminist Thought Group
S1.69

This is session no, 3 of this Thought Group.

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CSWG Black Feminist Thought Group
S1.69

We are excited to invite you to join our Black Feminist Thought Group, open to all students and postgraduate researchers at all levels who are interested in or are already actively engaging with Black feminist scholarship, practice and creative work.

This group will be more than a traditional reading group. Inspired by the core principles of Black feminist thought—collective growth, intersectionality and radical imagination—we鈥檒l create a collaborative space that welcomes a range of materials, voices and forms of expression.

The group will run once a month for a 2-hour session on the dates below.

  • Friday, October 17th, 2pm, S1.69
  • Friday, November 14th, 2pm, S1.69
  • Friday, December 12th, 2pm, S1.69

The group is led by and .

Whether you鈥檙e already engaged in Black feminist work or just starting to explore it, you鈥檙e welcome to join.

If you're interested in joining or want to hear more, you can register here. If you have any questions, you can email Marie at marie.casafina-orwin@warwick.ac.uk

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