Wendy Moore and Joyce Bell
Challenging the Right to Be Racist in College: Racist Speech, White Institutional Space and the First Amendment
A lecture on racist speech, institutional spaces and the First Amendment featuring professors Joyce M. Bell and Wendy Leo Moore, and hosted by Assistant Professor of Sociology Jennifer Mueller's Race and Power class.
Monday, November 5
7:00 p.m.
Gannett Auditorium, Palamountain Hall
Wendy Leo Moore is associate professor of sociology at Texas A&M University. Her research examines racial inequality and racism in the law, legal institutions and the broader social structure. Her book 鈥淩eproducing Racism: White Space, Elite Law Schools and Racial Inequality鈥 examines the way in which elite law schools operate as white institutional spaces, reproducing white racial norms and values, and the tacit justification of white power, privilege and wealth. |
Joyce M. Bell, is Don A. Martindale Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Minnesota. Her research deals with race, work and organizations, and social movements. Her book, 鈥淏lack Power Professionals: The Black Power Movement and American Social Work鈥 (2014, Columbia University Press) details the impact of the Black Power movement on the profession of social work. A second area of her research is concerned with diversity as a racial project. |
From hurling racist slurs, to hanging nooses, to 鈥済hetto鈥 parties caricaturing communities
of color, explicitly racist incidents continue to erupt on college and university
campuses around the nation. Bell and Moore disrupt common beliefs that such incidents
represent extremist anomalies in otherwise egalitarian institutions. Drawing on extensive
analysis of public news coverage, legal cases surrounding racist expression on campuses
and the website for the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, Moore and Bell
draw a thread between overt racist expression and the covert, institutionalized elements
of contemporary colorblind racism. Their analysis reveals how explicitly racist incidents
operate in tandem with neoliberal educational policies and colorblind racism 鈥 to
mark and reinscribe colleges and universities as 鈥渨hite institutional space.鈥
The event is hosted by Jennifer Mueller's Race and Power class with generous support from the Department of American Studies, Civic Engagement,
the Department of Education Studies, the Gender Studies Program, the Intergroup Relations
Program, the International Affairs Program, the Latin American and Latinx Studies
Program, the Department of Philosophy, the Department of Political Science, the Palamountain
Chair in Political Science, the Department of Social Work, the Department of Sociology,
the Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services (RAICES) and the
Office of the Vice President for Strategic Planning and Institutional Diversity.