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[ecrea] CFP: The Limits of Responsibility (Massey University, New Zealand, 3-5 Dec. 2012)
Wed Oct 17 20:41:40 GMT 2012
The Limits of Responsibility: Histories, Species, Politics
With apologies for cross-posting: please consider sending in an abstract
for this interdisciplinary conference.
The conference will be followed by a Masterclass with Prof. Susannah
Radstone at Otago University, Dunedin, New Zealand on December 7, 2012.
Presentations by Skype will be considered for overseas contributors.
Jenny Lawn
(j.m.lawn /at/ massey.ac.nz)
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Venue and date
Massey University, Manawatu Campus, Palmerston North, New
Zealand, 3-5 December 2012
Keynote speakers
Prof. Susannah Radstone, School of Arts and Digital Industries,
University of East London
Prof. Michael Belgrave, School of Humanities, Massey University
Dr Walescka Pino-Ojeda, Director of the New Zealand Centre for
Latin American Studies, University of Auckland
Abstracts due
19 October 2012
The limits of responsibility : Histories, species, politics
Responsibility is a key concept invoked in many contemporary
forums, popular and academic. A wide range of discourses, both in
cultural criticism and in public life, define the ethical and civil
responsibilities of the citizen and the human subject. Notions of
apology, reconciliation, reparation and collective trauma all hold
citizens to be responsible for forms of violence and oppression in their
personal lives and national histories – and responsive to the often
challenging claims of others. Beyond this, discourses about human and
animal rights demand responsibility for, or to, the lived, experiential
being of those outside the boundaries of national, ethnic or species
identity and seek to establish relations of care for others, including
non-human creatures. Similarly, political responsibility now extends
beyond immediate communities of interest based in nation, region or
belief to include those who are defined differently from normative
values in terms of age, gender, sexuality or disability. Whether this
reflects an amplification of the idea of a self’s or nation’s sense of
responsibility for its ‘others’ or a shift towards an ethical
realisation of necessary responsiveness to that which is deemed other,
remains in question.
Responsibility is also key to the work of major contemporary
theorists as divergent as Agamben, Levinas, Derrida and Ricoeur.
Contemporary Western society and culture might now be celebrated for its
responsiveness to ethical and political multiplicity. But these recent
cultural ‘advances’ may also be seen as complicit – along with the
technocratic state, corporate managerialism and therapeutic cultures
(including mass media) – with a tendency to control and direct human
relationships, emotions, memory and physical well-being. How should
responsibility be understood: with respect to the limits and borders
established and policed by the state and corporate capitalism, or, more
benignly, by discourses of apology and reconciliation or animal rights?
Who or what decides on the caesura that defines the threshold between
human and non-human, citizen and non-citizen, victim and terrorist, and
those that are included in or excluded from public commemoration,
repudiation or erasure? How can cultural criticism be responsible for,
or responsive to, the articulation of these limits and borders and their
social, political and historical impact?
We particularly welcome proposals that address the following
issues:
· Amnesty
· Animal rights
· Bare life
· Civil society
· Commemoration
· Cultural trauma
· Forgiveness
· Human rights
· Individual responsibility
· National affect
· Political apology
· Politics of memory
· Postcolonial identities
· Post-settlement politics
· Reconciliation
· Reparation
· Sacrifice
· Shame
· Terror
· Walled states
· Welfare reform
The conference convenors invite abstracts of no more than 300
words and a short bio to be sent to Allen Meek at (A.Meek /at/ massey.ac.nz)
and copied to Jenny Lawn at (J.M.Lawn /at/ massey.ac.nz) with “CONFERENCE” in
the subject line by 19 OCTOBER, 2012.
Further information and enrolment information is available on
the conference website at:
http://www.massey.ac.nz/massey/learning/departments/school-english-media-studies/conference-2012-the-limits-of-responsibility/conference-2012-the-limits-of_responsibility.cfm
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