Events | Black Germans Between Erasure and Tokenism

Royce Hall 236, UCLA | 7. März 2023 | 21:00 (MEZ)

Die Journalistin und Autorin Alice Hasters ist eine der wichtigsten zeitgenössischen schwarzen deutschen Stimmen. Ihr Bestseller „Was weiße menschen nicht über Rassismus hören wollen, aber wissen sollten" aus dem Jahr 2019 führte in Deutschland zu lebhaften öffentlichen Debatten über Rasse und Rassismus.

*Diese Veranstaltung findet in englischer Sprache statt*

In her lecture at UCLA, Hasters will address the central assumption that frames Black German life today: the perception that Black people are "new" to Germany. This assumption erases the fact that Black people have lived in German-speaking lands for hundreds of years. As she shows, it also allows anti-Black racism and its history to be falsely viewed as only an American or Western problem with no relation to the German context. Examining the dynamics that unfold from this skewed understanding, Hasters argues that attending to the history of anti-Black racism in Germany enables a deeper understanding of German identity, racism, and antisemitism today.

Teilnehmer:innen

Alice Hasters is a journalist, author, and podcaster. She studied at the German School of Journalism in Munich and after graduating worked for the »Tagesschau« and Rundfunk Berlin-Brandenburg, among others. Since 2016, Hasters has been producing the podcast »Feuer & Brot« (tr: Fire & Bread) about politics and pop culture together with Maximiliane Häcke. In her publications, she deals with the topics of Afro-German identity, racism, and intersectionality. Hasters was named culture journalist of the year in 2020 by medium magazine. She is the author of Was weiße Menschen nicht über Rassismus hören wollen, published by Hanser Verlag, and is currently a 2023 Fellow at the Thomas Mann House Los Angeles.

Veranstaltungsort:

University of California, Los Angeles

Royce Hall 236

10745 Dickson Ct,

Los Angeles, CA 90095

Diese Veranstaltung ist öffentlich.

Zur Anmeldung


Diese Veranstaltung wird präsentiert vom Department of European Languages & Transcultural Studies und dem Center for European & Russian Studies der University of California, Los Angeles in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Thomas Mann House.


    

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