Radical Imagination, Radical Equality (Panel)


Comparative Literature / Cultural Studies and Media Studies
Hybrid: The session will be held in-person but a few remote presentations may be included.

Vern Walker (Independent Scholar)

In the “Preface” of her work Imagination: A Manifesto, Ruha Benjamin models a practice of the imagination that is “undisciplined, promiscuous, and porous.” (ix) She writes, “... I refuse to police the parameters of imagination. I want more than anything for your imagination to run wild.” (ix) This running isn’t into any kind of avoidant fantasy world, but involves an intentional listening to and deep analysis of the sufferings and diverse ways of being in our world. It implies, Duha Benjamin clarifies, “collective imagination,” (x) and she sees her work as “a field guide for seeding an imagination grounded in solidarity, in which our underlying interdependence as a species and with the rest of the planet is reflected back at us in our institutions and social relationships.” (8)


Although we seek undisciplined imaginations, such a practice requires an unworking of our dogmatic ways of thinking.


Deleuze and Guattari - microfacism, concept creation

Martin Luther King Jr. - “inescapable network of mutuality”

Jacques Ranciere - equality, consensus, hatred of democracy

Judith Butler - interrelationality, nonviolence

Kristin Ross - commune form

Ursula Le Guin’s worlds

Karen Barad - agential realism, intra-action, entanglement

Rivers Solomon - collective memory, fungal turn

Ta-Nehisi Coates, Ayana Elizabeth Johnson - moral clarity does not imply naivety


Inspired by Ruha Benjamin’s Imagination: A Manifesto, how can we listen to and amplify the voices at the margins that are dismissed or silenced because they are otherwise rejected as naive or impossible for embracing the whole? How can we help each other refrain from “policing the parameters of imagination” (ix) as we are often trained to do, and openly encounter the collective imaginations of others? How can we together learn to take on the challenge that radical imagination begs for radical equality?