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[ecrea] Critical Theory, Culture & Citizenship - intensive summer school to be taught by Rosi Braidotti
Sun Jan 13 18:45:25 GMT 2013
Rosi Braidotti has asked me to disseminate details of an intensive
course she is teaching this summer in Utrecht. Description below,
website with further details here
_http://utrechtsummerschool.nl/index.php?type=courses&code=C30_
<http://utrechtsummerschool.nl/index.php?type=courses&code=C30>. Please
distribute widely.
This is an intensive course convened and taught by Rosi Braidotti and an
interdisciplinary team of co-teachers. It consists of keynote lectures
in the morning and three thematic tutorials for four afternoons (the
class ends at noon on Friday). The theme of the course is contemporary
critical theory in the Continental philosophy tradition, with special
reference to the work of Gilles Deleuze.
The course offers an introduction to contemporary critical debates on
the construction of subjects. Cultural diversity, global migration,
digital 'second life', genetically modified food, advanced prosthetics,
robotics and reproductive technologies are familiar facets of our global
and technologically mediated societies. How do they affect the
self-understanding, the cultural representations and the social and
political participations of contemporary subjects? The emphasis on
nomadic theory aims to outline a project of sustainable modern
subjectivity and to offer an original and powerful alternative for
scholars working in cultural and social criticism.
Arranged thematically, the sessions of the course explore the different
aspects of critical theory debates about contemporary subjectivity:
embodiment, gender and racial differences, multi-cultural and
post-secular citi¬zenship, issues linked to globalization, network
societies and techno-science. The course stresses the productive
potential of these features of our culture and it promotes the politics
of affirmation, which emphasize the importance of affects and the
imagination. It establishes a theoretical frame¬work that combines
critique and creation, granting a major role to the arts and new media.
By inscribing nomadic subjects in the content of contemporary culture,
the course also assesses the extent to which intense technological
mediation and global networks have blurred the traditional distinction
between the human and its others, both human and non-human others, thus
exposing the non-naturalistic structure of the human subject. The course
analyzes the escalating effects of the posthuman condition, which
encompass new relationships to animals and other species and ultimately
questions the sustainability of our planet as a whole. After delving
into the inhumane and structurally unjust aspects of our culture by
looking at new wars and contemporary conflicts, the course concludes by
outlining new forms of cosmopolitan nomadic citizenship. Rather than
perceiving the posthuman situation as a loss of cognitive and moral
self-mastery, this course argues that it helps us make sense of our
flexible nomadic identities.
The challenge for critical theory today consists in seizing the
opportunities for new social bonding and community building, while
pursuing sustainability and empowerment.
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