[PHILOS-L] CfA (Final Reminder): Race, Racism, and Racialisation in The European New Right (Graduate Conference, 24 September, FU Berlin)

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Chiujdea, Mihnea

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Sep 3, 2025, 1:14:38 PM (4 days ago) Sep 3
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Call for Abstracts
Graduate Conference


Race, Racism, and Racialisation in The European New Right

Freie Universität Berlin
Institute for Philosophy
24 September 2025

 

Confirmed keynote speakers: Leerom Medovoi (University of Arizona), Urs Lindner (University of Duisburg-Essen)

 

This conference aims to develop new insights into the form of racism promoted by the European New Right since 1945. As Étienne Balibar (1991) observes, this period has seen a shift from biological to cultural racism. In seeking greater acceptance within mainstream politics, the New Right has adopted a defensive posture: its rhetoric frames exclusionary politics as the protection of threatened groups rather than aggression towards others.

 

A prominent example is the socalled ‘Great Replacement’ conspiracy theory, which casts immigration and demographic change as an existential threat to certain populations. Another is ethnopluralism, a doctrine most famously associated with Alain de Benoist, but widely adopted across farright networks in Europe and North America.

 

Ethnopluralism recasts biological races as ethnic groups imagined to possess fixed, essential qualities central to collective and individual wellbeing. Despite abandoning the term ‘race’, it does not break with the process of racialisation: populations remain essentialised, geographically bounded, and often hierarchically ordered. Perceived threats such as migration, globalisation, and capitalism are presented as dangers to group integrity.

 

Marketed as a defence of diversity and autonomy of ethnic groups – even as a rejection of racism, cultural superiority, and xenophobia – ethnopluralism in practice legitimises cultural separatism, civilisational chauvinism, and what Rueda (2021) calls a nonbiological yet adaptive form of alterophobia and autophilia. By casting exclusion as the preservation of difference, it functions as a strategic form of cultural racism, readily embraced by movements that once endorsed overtly racist views or political violence.

 

Focusing on ethnopluralism and the ‘Great Replacement’ theory, this conference will explore how the New Right’s defensive racism operates. What processes of racialisation does it involve, and what conception of race emerges from them?

 

We invite abstracts from graduate students and early career researchers (within 2 years of their PhD) in philosophy and the social sciences. Possible questions include, but are not limited to:

 

·       What implications for the social ontology or metaphysics of groups do the New Right’s threatbased conceptions carry? Do these approaches offer the right theoretical tools for understanding what is distinctive about ideologies such as ethnopluralism?

·       How does ethnopluralism compare with other forms of alterophobia or racism, given its claimed rejection of biological race?

·       In the European context, some groups have been classified as ‘white’, yet racialised nonetheless. Is there any qualitative difference between speaking of ethnicities rather than races?

·       ‘Colourblind’ eliminativism – the rejection of race as a legitimate category in public and academic discourse – has been argued to be a distinctive feature of the European context (Bessone 2020; Ludwig 2020; James et al. 2024). Are there continuities between this and the New Right’s replacement of race with ethnicity?

·       How should we interpret the New Right’s critique of capitalism, given the close historical entanglement between racialisation and capitalist development?

·       USbased scholars have explored the role of ‘threat’ in understanding race (e.g. Goldberg 2008; Medovoi 2024). Do their insights apply to the New Right, or does the latter’s ideology demand a different analytical framework?

 

Participants will have up to 20 minutes to present their papers, followed by 10 minutes of discussion. Presentations will be in English.

 

A small number of bursaries will be available to help cover travel costs (paid as an honorarium). Priority will be given to those without institutional support.

 

This graduate conference forms part of a threeday event on race, racialisation, and racism in the European context. Invited speakers for the subsequent two days (25-26 September) include: Leda Berio (University College Dublin), Daniel James (TU Dresden), Steffen Koch (University of Bielefeld), Alex Wiegmann (University of Granada), Magali Bessone (Université Paris 1 PanthéonSorbonne), Lawrence Blum (University of Massachusetts Boston), Esa Díaz León (University of Barcelona), David Ludwig (Wageningen University), Joanna Karolina Malinowska (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań), Marcello Maneri (University of MilanoBicocca), Aleksandra Lewicki (University of Sussex), Reza Mosayebi (Ruhr-Universität Bochum).

 

Submission guidelines: Please submit an abstract of up to 400 words by 7 September 2025. Send your abstract to mihnea....@fu-berlin.de, with the subject line “Abstract”, including your name, affiliation, a brief biographical note, and information about any need for travel funding. Successful applicants will be notified by 12 September.

 

Organiser: Mihnea Chiujdea, Freie Universität Berlin

Funding: German Federal Ministry of Research, Technology and Space and the State of Berlin, as part of the Excellence Strategy of the Federal and State Governments, via the Berlin University Alliance.


--
Dr. des. Mihnea Chiujdea (Er/He)

Visiting Lecturer (Lehrbeauftragter)
Institut für Philosophie
Freie Universität Berlin
Habelschwerdter Allee 30 
14195 Berlin 

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