Archive for 2022

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[Commlist] Digital Mediation and Working Through in Times of Denial, Disavowal and Splitting: On the Un/Representable - workshop

Wed Aug 24 08:48:42 GMT 2022







*Digital Mediation and Working Through in Times of Denial, Disavowal and Splitting: On the Un/Representable*

An International Workshop
Organised by Dr Orit Dudai and Assoc. Prof. Jacob Johanssen - Supported by the Association for Psychosocial Studies

St. Mary’s University, Twickenham, 14-15 September 2022

An in-person workshop, free lunch and refreshments will be provided. Remote participation won't be possible. The goal of this workshop is for presenters to share work-in-progress and engage in collegial discussion with each other and attendees. Places are therefore limited.

Register: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/workshop-tickets-404516629127 <https://www.eventbrite.com/e/workshop-tickets-404516629127>


We live in a time that is characterised by increasing political polarisation, fake news, conspiracy theories and other forms of extremism. Recent political developments, such as the post-Trump moment, have been credited with an increase in political paranoia and conspiracy theories that have spread far and wide on the internet. Social media such as Facebook, Twitter or Instagram exhibit high levels of misogyny, sexism and racism and are described as lacking in empathy, compassion and love. Traditional media, such as tabloid and broadsheet journalism or television news, also find themselves part of “culture wars” and torn between different political positions. Fictional representations of trauma, conflict and polarisation as well as working through also have a long tradition.

This workshop will explore what role psychoanalysis in combination with other disciplines, such as media and communication studies, philosophy and sociology, can play in analysing such phenomena, as well as finding possible solutions for them.

Do we need a new form of empathy or spirituality? To what extent are moments of denial, disavowal and polarization necessary? Can they revitalize political culture and society more generally? What are their limits? What solutions can be found? How are they intrinsically connected to questions of digital mediation and representation? How are they represented in film and popular culture? What tensions are revealed between what can be represented and what remains unrepresentable?

*Speakers*
Dr Jack Black (Sheffield Hallam University)
Dr Alfie Bown (Royal Holloway University)
Dr Orit Dudai (Kibbutzim College of Education, Technology and the Arts/Bar Ilan University)
Assoc. Professor Jon Hackett (St. Mary’s University)
Assoc. Professor Jacob Johanssen (St. Mary’s University)
Dr Anthony Faramelli (Goldsmiths)
Dr Thi Gammon (Independent Scholar)
Dr Steffen Krüger (University of Oslo)
Dr Em. Sandra Meiri (Open University, Israel)
Professor Raya Morag (The Hebrew University)
Dr Mark Murphy (Independent Scholar)
Professor Candida Yates (Bournemouth University)


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