CfP Conference on “Tracking Global Wokeism”

Conference organized by the GUST Global Studies Center  
 
Jan. 17-19. 2023  
 
Tracking Global Wokeism  
The word ‘woke’, initially coined by African Americans in the 1930s as an injunction to stay mindful of racial inequalities, has over the last decade been used to raise awareness of any sort of discrimination. The term has helped to advance the cause of social justice in many domains. However, a search on the internet can quickly yield the impression that “woke” is now, similar to “Political Correctness,” predominantly used in a negative fashion. People who are “too woke” are criticized as dogmatic, self-righteous, and obsessed with moral purity.  

Does this phenomenon exist in the non-Western world? If yes, is it imported from America or does it have vernacular roots? Is wokeness compatible with existing traditions? A Chinese term corresponding to wokeism is “baizuo,” meaning “white left,” which is curious given the African American origin of the term. Feelings of guilt have led privileged Americans (and Europeans) to the adoption of wokeism. What is the Arab, African, Latin American, or Asian view on this? Is the search for “individualism” that wokeism supports less strong in these regions, thus making any introduction of woke impossible or superfluous? Is wokeism simply the domain of privileged “First World” youth and irrelevant for other places? Wokeism is based on “identity politics,” which is a typically American phenomenon. Can it/should it be imported into the non-West?   
Russian president Putin frequently speaks up against Western “cancel culture” and criticizes as pathetic debates on gender and race led by what he argues are spoiled individuals steeped in consumerism and feelings of entitlement. What happens when Islam meets woke? Does Islamic culture generate something like its own kind of wokeness? Or do, in these parts of the world, traditional “class based” fights remain more relevant for leftist politics than identity politics? What shape, if any, does wokeness adopt in South America or Africa?  
Some examples of topics that can be explored in this conference:  
  
  • Is wokeism possible in formerly colonized nations?   
  • Is there an Islamic language code that comes close to woke?  
  • Is the banning of Halloween or Valentine’s Daya sort of Islamic woke?  
  • Does cancel culture exist everywhere?   
  • Do Arabs, Asian, Latin Americans/Hispanics, Africans, etc. have a problem with Identity Appropriation?  
  • Is there woke-washing (companies who signal support for progressive causes as a substitute for genuine reform)?  
  • Does the Human Resources department of your non-Western university send you a long bullet-point list about how to look at and interact with people?   
Research on other elements of “political correctness”, identity politics, any state-sponsored (or religion-sponsored) discourse on moral righteousness, or other similar topics are also welcome for consideration.  
  
Abstracts are due by September 30, 2022.  
The conference takes place at the Gulf University for Science and Technology (GUST) in Kuwait and is organized by the GUST Global Studies Center.  
There is no registration fee.  
Please send abstracts to gsc@gust.edu.kw 

2 thoughts on “CfP Conference on “Tracking Global Wokeism”

  1. OK. Please let me ask. Is ‘wokeism’ anything like waking up? The latter has been a theme of some work(s) recently read or read about. I can visualize the aura projected by this enlightened state as spawning accusations of self-righteousness, and also connection with metaphysics, eastern or otherwise, which could be globally tracked. My own investigations and comparisons on the notion of metaphysics have shown me there is a place for it; that it is not, as some have asserted, pointless. The ‘place’ I am not yet certain of. Must read more…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.