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[ecrea] CFPs GASC 2017 Stockholm University
Mon Feb 20 15:44:08 GMT 2017
Pre-human, Human, Post-human: Generative Anthropology and Mimetic Theory
in Conversation with Cognitive Studies
Stockholm University, Sweden June 8-10, 2017
Plenary Speakers: William Flesch, Eric Gans, Peter Gärdenfors
Conference Website - https://gasc2017.com
NB: Media and communication studies scholars are most welcome!
The Generative Anthropology Society and Conference (GASC) is pleased to
announce its 11th annual summer conference. The first one in Europe, it
will be held at the University of Stockholm, Sweden, not far from the
center of the city and very easy to reach by public transportation.
Stockholm is a historic and very beautiful city with many attractions,
and early June is the best time to visit.
This conference will initiate a dialogue between Generative
Anthropology, mimetic theory, and cognitive science. Some philosophers
of cognitive science agree with Generative Anthropology that the
development of language marked the appearance of symbolic thinking.
While cognitive scientists argue that this capacity has enabled advanced
forms of cooperation, Generative Anthropology and mimetic theory
emphasize the emergence of ethics as a response to mimetic violence. The
cognitive and anthropological perspectives, however, converge in their
recognition of a specifically human cultural consciousness on a scene of
representation, making dialogue urgent and valuable, with the potential
to generate new ways of thinking about human interactions, violence and
conflict resolution, as well as diverse cultural expressions and
aesthetic forms.
What might be seen as the anthropocentrism uniting cognitive science, on
the one hand, and Generative Anthropology and mimetic theory, on the
other, need not exclude dialogue with those theories of the post-human
that have critiqued the effort to distinguish and therefore privilege
the human as an anthropocentric denial of other forms of subjectivity.
Such views point to our anthropocentric blindness as a cause of
political and environmental crises, but the anthropocentrism addressed
by such critiques may simply represent insufficiently “scenic”
understandings of the human. Both sides in this debate might benefit
from testing their views against one another. Seeking an ever broader
and more productive conversation, we invite papers that engage with GA
on both sides of the debate. Topics might include, but are not limited to:
· The anthropology of symbolic thinking
· The evolution or history of cultural and aesthetic forms
• Evolutionary game theory
• Mimetic theory (René Girard)
• Narratology, including cognitive narratology and affective
narratology
· Literature on the scene of representation
• Animal Studies, Ecocriticism, Posthumanism, Affect theory,
Neo-vitalism
• Object-oriented ontology
• Sociolinguistics and anthropological linguistics, Sociology of
language
Please submit short proposals for 20-minute papers in either Word or PDF
format to (marina.ludwigs /at/ english.su.se) by April 1, 2017.
Students are invited to apply for GASC Student Award (value approx. $CND
400). See https://gasc2017.com/student-award/ for details.
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