The UCL Centre for Gender and Global Health

News & Events

Coloniality and the construction of gender as a binary

10 February, 6-8pm

Kennedy Lecture Theatre, UCL Institute of Child Health, 30 Guilford Street, London WC1N 1DP

Photo: Ed Prosser

Join us for our fourth Beyond the Binary seminar, and a panel discussion on the coloniality of gender as a concept, and as a binary division of identity and sexuality. Presenters Anuj Kapilashrami, Laura Lewis and Leticia Sabsay will draw on their regional expertise and knowledge of gender and sexuality to discuss the implications of this for global health, considering its intersectionality with race and ethnicity, its relationship with feminism and how some its many manifestations in terms of wellbeing.

Maria Lugones describes gender as a colonial/modern system at the intersection of race, gender and colonisation. Building on Quijano’s concept of the Coloniality of Power, which locates colonialism as an ongoing process, Lugones emphasises how this has operated in the construction of gender (Lugones 2008, Quijano 2000). The initial centuries of this process happened in parallel to European state-making, leading to profound social and political transformations that Historian Irene Silverblatt (2009) describes as ‘a revolution in the possible ways of being human’.

Recognising that coloniality is a process that has occurred in different ways across the globe discussant Ayesha Ahmad will speak to its relevance to the Arab world and with Jennie Gamlin will draw out from these presentations ideas of how research and policy can address the coloniality of gender within the field of Global Health.

Tickets are free but registration is required via Eventbrite.

Professor Laura A Lewis, Professor of Anthropology, Department of Modern Languages and Linguistics, University of Southampton.

Title: 'The social and somatic expression of illness among Afromexicans: ‘Coraje’, gender and anger'

Dr. Leticia Sabsay, Associate Professor in Gender and Contemporary Culture, LSE Department of Gender Studies.

Title: “Our bodies, our territories”: Latin American feminists and the colonising work of gender

Dr. Anuj Kapilashrami, Senior Lecturer in Global Health Policy, Centre for Global Public Health, QMUL

Title TBC

Dr. Ayesha Ahmad (Discussant), Lecturer in Global Health at St George's University of London, and Honorary Lecturer at IGH (Discussant)

Tweet

Back to News & Events