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[ecrea] Contested Truths: Re-Shaping and Positioning Politics of Knowledge
Thu Sep 23 08:21:48 GMT 2010
>CfP call for paper
>Conference
>Contested Truths: Re-Shaping and Positioning Politics of Knowledge
>16.06.11-18.06.11
>Berlin, Germany
>
>Aims of the conference
>The central topic of the conference is the
>politics of knowledge and its entanglement with
>issues of epistemics, power and gender. Focusing
>on a deeper understanding of the knowledge-power
>nexus, the conference particularly aims to
>analyze social and epistemological orders,
>configurations and hierarchies of knowledge.
>Thereby, a wide range of issues dealing with
>different sites of knowledge production, objects
>of inquiry and fields of research will be
>addressed. The conference seeks to contribute to
>debates concerning the situatedness of
>knowledge. This topic was first adressed in the
>humanities, science and technology studies and
>gender studies by Foucault, Bourdieu, Latour,
>Haraway, Harding and Barad among others.
>
>The conference particularly engages with the
>following questions from this vast and
>heterogeneous field: How is knowledge socially
>and epistemically formed and positioned? What
>are the consequences of certain practices and
>techniques of knowledge formation? Where and how
>does knowledge legitimate power relations? How
>can hegemonic politics of knowledge be
>destabilized and re-shaped? Finally, what are
>the 'conditions of possibility' for truths to be
>contested? The three panels address these
>central questions by (1) uncovering implicit
>knowledge politics in the formation of
>disciplines and the process of canonization, (2)
>discussing the impact of classifications and
>infrastructures and (3) questioning and
>destabilizing universal and neutral knowledge.
>
>1. Forming disciplines and canonization
>This panel focuses on the political implications
>of the formation of disciplines and the process
>of canonization. Contributions might analyze,
>for instance, how disciplines are defined by the
>gendering of their methods and theoretical
>foundations as demonstrated in computer science
>and historiography. Other topics include the
>function of efforts for integration (such as the
>aim to position psychology as a life science) or
>boundary work (such as distinguishing gender
>studies from the knowledge of feminist
>activists). Papers could identify and question
>legitimating strategies or analyze 'regimes of
>translation' (Latour). One example of this type
>of analysis is the study of the migration of the
>term 'system' from engineering to sociology. We
>are also looking for presentations that point
>out the mutual dependency between certified and
>accepted knowledge and excluded and rejected 'non-knowledge'.
>
>2. Classification and infrastructure
>Classification systems arrange knowledge in a
>proper order (e.g., the biological systematics
>of Linné), help to find knowledge (e.g., library
>classifications) or aim to support communication
>by providing controlled vocabularies (e.g., in
>knowledge management). However, classifications
>are at the same time instruments of power. We
>seek contributions, which investigate social and
>epistemological exclusions that are intertwined
>with particular classifications and
>infrastructures. Participants might present case
>studies that explore how classifications are
>(co-)produced by those who are classified (such
>as in virtual social networks). Presentations
>about strategies to avoid knowledge
>classification systems and those, which call
>existing classifications or infrastructures into
>question, are welcome. In addition, we also
>encourage submissions on the subversive
>potential of infrastructures (as in queer projects).
>
>3. Localizing and positioning knowledge
>By viewing knowledge as situated and located,
>the panel raises questions about the position of
>authorship, conflicts between legitimation and
>marginalization, as well as differences between
>global and local knowledge distribution.
>Contributors could address some of these
>problems within different theoretical
>frameworks, e.g., by developing critical
>perspectives or drawing on established concepts
>such as -situated knowledge' (Haraway) from
>fields such as gender or science studies. They
>might also examine particular politics of
>location, demarcation or transgression of
>boundaries that are, e.g., inspired by notions
>such as -travelling concepts' (Bal) or
>-quasi-objects' (Latour) or 'travelling
>theories' (Said) following postcolonial
>theories. We are also interested in proposals
>for anti-hegemonic positioning of knowledge or
>the possibilities of decolonization in the production of knowledge.
>
>Important information
>We invite abstracts for twenty-minute papers.
>Abstracts should be in English and may not
>exceed 300 words. They should be accompanied by
>a short biographical sketch of not more than 300
>words and sent to (contestedtruths /at/ gmail.com)
>until 1 December 2010. Please indicate the panel your paper relates to.
>
>The conference language will be English. Please
>indicate your accessibility needs as well as any
>other possible requirements (e.g., childcare) by
>1 December 2010, we will do our best to meet
>them or get back to you to figure out what we
>can do. Please note that travel funds can only
>be granted in exceptional cases. We ask
>participants to apply in time for travel funding at their home institutions.
>
>Organizing committee
>-- PhD research programm "Gender as a category
>of knowledge" (working group "knowledge": Dr.
>des. Corinna Bath, Jens Borcherding M.A., Lukas
>Engelmann M.A., Dipl.-Psych. Lisa Malich, Falko Schnicke M.A.)
>-- Charité Berlin (Prof. Dr. Volker Hess) and the
>-- Technical University of Braunschweig (Prof. Dr. Bettina Wahrig)
>
>Email: (contestedtruths /at/ gmail.com)
>
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