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Sociology Research

 

Melz completed their first degree in Philosophy and Politics at the University of Leeds and graduated from a masters in Social and Political Thought from the same University. Throughout their studies they have been actively committed to social justice work both within the University and beyond it, they served as the Education sabbatical officer at the University of Leeds and took on a number of key roles in the NUS and National student movement. Melz is also the Founder of the Free Black University, a new project aiming to offer radical education outside of the institution. They are an activist who has worked in a number of spaces such as Black Lives Matter UK, decolonising education, and trans visibility. They are a multifaceted artist and academic, their work explores the radical Black imagination and building transformative worlds both within and outside of themself. Melz always endeavours to take this radical, queer, decolonial, Black feminist analysis forward in all aspects of their life and work.

Research Interests

Black Radical Imagination, Epistemology, Black Feminist Thought, Speculative Fiction, Spirituality, Uses of the Erotic and Desire, Decolonial Theory, Queer Theory, Gender Studies

Research Projects

PhD:

The Speculative, Sacred, and Erotic: Engaging the Radical Black Imagination to Shape Alternative Worlds

My thesis will primarily explore how epistemic paradigms can be shifted to offer alternative knowledges about the possibilities of social change and transformation. I will engage the Radical Black Imagination as my point of departure to begin exploring what exists beyond the rational and empirical.

My thesis is concerned with what possibilities are opened up when we give primary importance to the imagination that is limitless and unbound by the parameters of ‘Western’ science and the evidence-based model. The work will explore, but is not limited to, an analysis of the spiritual, speculation, and the erotic as valid and important epistemologies that allow us to conceive a different future.

Key research questions:

How are Black people in the US and UK engaging in a praxis of radical imagination and speculation about alternative futures?

How are the speculative, the spiritual, and the erotic important forms of knowledge production?

Teaching

Formations of Modernity. Undergraduate Level 1. University of Leeds, Department of Sociology (2017 – 2018).

Central Problems in Sociology. Undergraduate Level 2. University of Leeds, Department of Sociology (2017 – 2018).

Key Publications - Book Chapters

Owusu, Melz. 2021. My Ancestors Whisper in the Trees. Black joy / edited by Charlie Brinkhurst-Cuff, Timi Sotire. Penguin Press: London, pp. 68 – 78.

Key Publications - Other

Owusu, M. (2018) ‘Black Trans Bois and Reimagining Masculinity’, Medium, 19 November. (Accessed: 2 February 2022).

Owusu, M. (2019) ‘Reproductive Justice for Trans and Non-binary People is About More Than Language’, Medium, 27 May. (Accessed: 2 February 2022).

Owusu, M. (2020b) ‘One Year on Testosterone: Time, Spirituality, and the (Un)Gendering of Blackness’, Medium, 29 April. (Accessed: 2 February 2022).

Owusu, M. (2020c) Opinion: Black trans people are disrespected in life and ignored in death – our lives matter too, The Independent. (Accessed: 2 February 2022).

PhD Supervisor

Media Articles

Awards

Top 10 Black Students in the UK - Rare Recruitment (2017)

Additional Information

Melz is a prolific speaker and has spoken at over 100 events across the UK and internationally. They speak on issues ranging from gender to decoloniality and imagination. They are available for a limited number of bookings through their website where you can also find out more about them - https://www.melzowusu.com/

Job Title:
PhD Student, St Catharine's College
Melz Owusu
Contact Information: