{"id":14791,"date":"2023-07-17T12:17:22","date_gmt":"2023-07-17T16:17:22","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.yorku.ca\/glendon\/?p=14791"},"modified":"2023-07-17T12:17:25","modified_gmt":"2023-07-17T16:17:25","slug":"engaging-critically-with-the-intersection-of-blackness-womanhood-and-islam-in-canadian-and-nordic-society-an-interview-with-professor-jan-mendes%e2%80%af","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.yorku.ca\/glendon\/2023\/07\/17\/engaging-critically-with-the-intersection-of-blackness-womanhood-and-islam-in-canadian-and-nordic-society-an-interview-with-professor-jan-mendes%e2%80%af\/","title":{"rendered":"Engaging Critically with the Intersection of Blackness, Womanhood and Islam in Canadian and Nordic Society: An Interview with Professor Jan Mendes\u202f\u00a0"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
Interview by Xaneva Elorriaga George<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n
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Jan Mendes<\/em><\/strong>\u202fis an Assistant Professor of gender and sexuality studies with the Department of Sociology at the University of Amsterdam. Mendes holds a PhD in Social and Political Thought from 快播视频, Canada (2019). From 2019 - 2022 Mendes was a postdoctoral fellow in studies of gender and race with the Centre for Gender Studies at the University of Stavanger, Norway and the 2020-2021 visiting scholar with the Amsterdam Research Centre for Gender and Sexuality at the University of Amsterdam. Previously Mendes has held visiting scholar positions at Uppsala University\u2019s Centre for Multidisciplinary Studies on Racism (2018) and with Stockholm University\u2019s Department of Culture and Aesthetics (2017).\u202f<\/em>\u00a0 \u202f<\/em>\u00a0 Mendes is a Black Studies and Media Studies scholar whose research interrogates how affects are machinated against Black and Black Muslim bodies and desires within Northern welfare nations. Invoking frames of analyses from Black political theory, Black visual culture, feminist theory, and Islamophobia studies, Mendes\u2019 past and present work examines themes such as, Black mournability and human exile; the Black womb and reproduction; pedagogies of assimilation and humiliation; as well as the possibilities of willfulness and witnessing found through media and AfroDiasporic visual and performance art. Mendes co-founded and co-hosts the monthly, cross-national reading group \u201cReadings in Critical Race Theory and Gender Studies\u201d which explores themes from visual culture, queer and trans theories, and Black feminist theory. Mendes is also the founder of the international collective \u201cBlack Feminist Fridays: Nordic and Beyond\u201d (BFF) which invites junior scholars, grad students, artists, activists, and community members to a dynamic bi-weekly discussion on the Black quotidian. Along with two members of BFF, Mendes is co-guest editor of the lambda nordica special issue entitled, \u201cTroubling Racism: Subversive bodies, Subversive desires\u201d (2024). Mendes\u2019 publications can be found in Souls, Hypatia, the Palgrave MacMillan Handbook on Trans and Queer Performance, Periskop, the European Journal of Women\u2019s Studies, and Ethnic and Racial Studies, among others.\u202f<\/em>\u00a0<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n
In your 2022 feature presentation with 快播视频, \"Ways of Witnessing Black Motherhood,\" you described how Black suffering and, in its most extreme, Black death, taints the white public imaginary\u202fmore than it threatens Northern Europe's non-discriminatory reputation. Having researched in Sweden, the Netherlands and Norway, what were the challenges you faced as a Black woman living in an environment where far-right movements grow ever stronger, denying Black humanity and promoting indifference to anti-Black violence?\u202f<\/strong> <\/h3>\n\n\n\n
Thank you for the question. First, I need to begin with a slight correction on the question\u2019s formulation of my analysis. I do not argue that Black death \u201ctaints\u201d the white imaginary but rather, I contend that the national imaginary that affectively binds together the white citizenry of the white-dominated Canadian and Swedish nation is familiar with Black death and thus often unperturbed by Black suffering. In other words, because it is to Blackness that suffering is understood to normatively belong, suffering is at home in the Black body. Here I am in direct conversation with Black feminist and Black political theorists who have come before me and remain instrumental to my thinking (e.g. Christina Sharpe, Claudia Rankine, Calvin Warren). My recent research, conducted throughout my postdoctoral fellowship in Gender Studies in Norway, has most closely focused on the suffering and mortal threat posed to the reproducing Black body and to Black maternal subjects\u2014which is what I explored through my presentation at the\u202f2022 Annual Lecture for the School of Gender, Sexuality, and Women\u2019s Studies<\/a>. <\/p>\n\n\n\n