
In this episode I interview Alanah Mortlock, who is a fellow member of the African-Caribbean Research Collective and is studying for a PhD in Gender Studies at the London School of Economics. We discuss transracialism, which is the main focus of her PhD, as well as touching on the concepts of blackfishing, racial ambiguity, and passing. We consider her journey from undergraduate to PhD postgrad, how she navigated the application process at a university she was already part of, and the importance of utilising the contacts you generate throughout your academic career. We also discuss how to keep motivated over a 3-4 year PhD and important factors to consider when choosing your supervisor.
Guest bio
Alanah Mortlock is an ESRC funded Doctoral candidate at the London School of Economics, Department of Gender Studies. She is conducting research into how academic and popular discourses of “transracialism” interact with theorisations of Blackness, engaging a critical lens invested in Black feminist and trans scholarships and politics. Alanah’s broader research interests include Black feminisms, theorisations and epistemologies of Blackness, mixed-raceness and racial ambiguity, and the intersections of gender, race and sexuality.
Being light-skinned mixed-race (Jamaican and white British) and racially ambiguous, Alanah has a particular interest in questions of representation and voice in academia and Black feminism. Through practices of self-reflection and -interrogation, her work pursues political and epistemological modes of engaging with Blackness from this position of marginality and great privilege.
Alanah received her BSc (2015) in Psychology from the University of Warwick, where she wrote her dissertation on how exposure to internet activist campaigns affected participant’s perceptions of gender discrimination. She received her MSc (2017) in Gender from the London School of Economics, writing a dissertation that gives a Black feminist critique of academic feminism’s interaction with the concept of “transracialism”. She is a member of the Engenderings blog Editorial Collective and the African-Caribbean Research Collective. You can follow Alanah on Twitter (@AlanahMortlock) to keep updated with her work.
Host bio
Nina Higson-Sweeney is a first-year PhD student in the Department of Psychology at the University of Bath. Her PhD is funded by the ESRC through the South West Doctoral Training Partnership, and she is using mixed methods to explore the symptom of fatigue within adolescent depression. Prior to her PhD, Nina completed a BSc in Psychology and a MSc Health Psychology at the University of the West of England. Nina has contributed to several peer-reviewed journal articles throughout her degrees, exploring topics such as depression, CFS/ME, HIV, and loneliness and mental health in children and young people. You can follow her on Twitter (@n_higsonsweeney) and ResearchGate.
Links to organisations
If you want to check out the African-Caribbean Research Collective, you can join us here.
You can also learn more about the Black Scholarship Collective via their Twitter (@Bsc2Phd).
Credits
Funding for this podcast is provided by the South West Doctoral Training Partnership (@_SWDTP on Twitter).
Cover art is by the talented Hannah Balogun (@hannah_balogun on Instagram).
Intro music is ‘I Was Messed Up (Instrumental Version)’ by Ella Faye, from Epidemic Sound.
Outro music is ‘Stereo (Instrumental Version)’ by Ella Faye, from Epidemic Sound.
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