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[ecrea] CFP: The 5th International Rethinking Humanities and Social Science Conference (September 26-8, 2014, University of Zadar)
Wed Mar 12 03:15:39 GMT 2014
The 5th International Rethinking Humanities and Social Science
Conference (September 26-8, 2014, University of Zadar).
We are pleased to announce that the 5th International Rethinking
Humanities and Social Science Conference is to be held at the University
of Zadar, Croatia, from September 26-28, 2014.
Since 2010 the conference has offered an invaluable opportunity to meet,
exchange ideas and debate on current topics in humanities and social
sciences. This year’s conference focuses on questions of the possibility
of new utopian faith beyond nation, state, capital, the world market and
world citizenship based on the economy of (global) sovereignty.
Keynote speaker: Simon Critchley (The New School for Social Research,
New York)
Roundtable: Eric Santner (Department of Germanic Studies, University of
Chicago), Fred Botting (English Literature and Creative Writing,
Kingstone University), Laura Mulvey (Department of Film, Media and
Cultural Studies, University of London), Mark Devenney (Politics and
Philosophy, University of Brighton).
Guest artist: Brandon Labelle (Bergen Academy of Art)
CFP: Utopia and political theology today
The Book of Revelations describes the Holy City, a New Jerusalem with
transparent glassy streets and pearly walls – a city so heavenly that,
“The nations will walk by its light” (Revelation 22.24). All nations,
the poor, outcasts, all races, all human forms, will dwell forever
within the Light of the Lord. In The City of God Saint Augustine
developed this Heavenly City as an idealised polis, as an eternal haven
of joy above and beyond the material world of the dying Roman Empire.
“An eternal haven of joy”, a “light for all human forms” signals the
emotional dimension of the utopian promise for the oppressed, the
noncountable, the marginalized, the different, the singular. Today,
after the catastrophic failure of the communist projects at the end of
the last century and the global domination of liberal democracy, perhaps
more than ever we miss this emotional side of the utopian faith. Perhaps
this is the reason for the recent theological revival and the unusual
upturn in interest in political theology.
The utopian side of political theology today calls us to reexamine and
rethink what it means to be a human self and what selves might be
together. How are contemporary politics, art and culture contaminated
by different forms of the sacred? How is dominant liberal discourse and
the myth of modernity as a pure secular form of politics interiorized
and maintained? How does the discourse of ‘crisis’ connect to
submissions of the oppressed and production of the sense of a ‘damaged
future’? Does any emancipatory project require what Simon Critchley
calls both a counterfactual faith and utopian faith in radical social
imagination as a performative alternative to biocapitalism?
We invite papers that address these questions through critical
examination of the ways utopian faith has been envisaged in literature,
film, performance, art, politics, philosophy…. We hope that the
participation of scholars from different fields and disciplines of
humanities and social sciences will create new avenues for
critically-oriented scholarship and collaboration.
Possible topics include (but are not limited to):
· the political promise of the performative (political deployments
of performativity in art, performances, individual actions, movements,
protests….etc.)
· the survival of different forms of utopias in dystopias – e.g.,
in new forms of life often represented as monsters (zombies….)
· the utopian faith in images, or in the possibility to ‘liberate’
images across gender/class/race division….
· the utopian promise of plural performativity and the politics of
memoralization
· the affects of belonging and discourses on the good life and
collective well-being
· sound and sonic utopianism
· revisiting the "classics" of political theology (Benjamin,
Schmitt, Kantorowicz, etc.)
· the challenge of capital to emancipatory politics
· time and temporality of (political) change
· the meaning of "messianic" in late capitalism
· Etc.
Please send proposals for 20-minute papers (no more than 200 words +
keywords) to (rhss.conference /at/ gmail.com) by June 1st 2014.
Abstracts should be in Word or RTF formats and include the following:
a) author(s) – name and surname
b) affiliation
c) e-mail address
d) keywords
Selected conference papers will be published.
Conference Fees
Early Bird (by July 31): 80 Euros?
Registration (by August 31): 100 Euros?
Additional Information
The conference will take place at the University of Zadar, Croatia
(www.unizd.hr).
Additional information about travel arrangements, accommodation and
other practical details will be posted soon on the conference website
(http://www.rhss-conference.com) or you can contact the organizers
directly at (rhss.conference /at/ gmail.com)
Please check out our Facebook page -https://www.facebook.com/RHSSZadar
Please forward this message to your colleagues. We look forward to
seeing you in Zadar in September.
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