About this Event
Boston College, 300 Hammond Street, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA
Irish Studies will host a panel discussion on race in Ireland with Emma Dabiri (broadcaster and writer), Kim DaCosta (NYU), Chanté Mouton Kinyon (Notre Dame University), Victor Augusto da Cruz Pacheco (University of São Paulo), and Lorelle Semley (Boston College).
Emma Dabiri FRSL is an award-winning (Cannes Lion, Gold Medal of Honorary Patronage University Philosophical Society and Praeses Elite Award (2023)) broadcaster and Sunday Times best-selling author of Don't Touch My Hair, What White People Can Do Next and Disobedient Bodies. She spent over a decade as a teaching fellow in the African department of SOAS University of London. In 2022, she was appointed Heimbold Chair of Irish Studies at Villanova University in PA. Emma is a Contributing Editor at ELLEUK and a columnist at The Guardian. She has presented numerous history, arts and culture series on both TV and radio including Journeys into Afrofuterism, BBC's Back in Time, and Britain's Lost Masterpieces.
Kimberly McClain DaCosta is an Associate Professor of Sociology at New York University's Gallatin School of Individualized Study. DaCosta served as Gallatin's dean of students for seven years and was part of the founding leadership team of NYU's Prison Education Program. She is the author of Making Multiracials: State, Family and Market in the Redrawing of the Color Line (Stanford 2007) and other articles on the commercialization of intimate life and institutional production of racial boundaries. She teaches a summer course in Dublin called the Black and Green Atlantic, exploring African and Irish diasporic connections.
Chanté Mouton Kinyon is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Notre Dame. A scholar of transatlanticism and race, Mouton Kinyon investigates African American, Irish, and Caribbean literature and culture from the end of the nineteenth century to the present. In addition to her scholarship on the long history of the Irish-Black cultural exchange, her research also considers the transnationalism of writers and art that is often limited to discussions of its national impact and significance in contrast to the very international explorations of the artists themselves. In particular, her scholarship focuses on performative material that articulates race and identity; her goal is to illuminate a narrative of cultural exchange that is rooted in the intersection of literature and history.
Victor Pacheco holds a PhD and a master's degree from the University of São Paulo. In 2022, he completed a research internship abroad at the University of Limerick, Ireland. He holds a bachelor's degree in Letters (Pourtugeses-Spanish) from the Faculty of Philosophy, Letters and Human Sciences (FFLCH/USP) and took courses at the University of Buenos Aires, Argentina during an academic exchange program (2016). He undertook an undergraduate research "The representations of revolutionary Ireland in Sean O'Faolain's short stories" (2014), funded by a scholarship from the Rectory of the University of São Paulo. He is a member of the International Association for the Study of Irish Literatures (IASIL) and the Spanish Association of Irish Studies (AEDEI). He is currently the editorial assistant for the William Butler Yeats Chair of Irish Studies. Pacheco integrates the board of directors of the Brazillian Association of Irish Studies and is the Brazillian representative for the IASIL Biography.