[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] CFP: Revisiting the Concepts, Politics and Cultures of Multitude
Sat May 14 10:41:54 GMT 2016
Revisiting the Concepts, Politics and Cultures of Multitude
deadline:
October 1, 2016
full name / name of organization:
Benjamin Halligan / University of Wolverhampton
contact email:
(b.halligan /at/ wlv.ac.uk) <mailto:(b.halligan /at/ wlv.ac.uk)>
Networks of protest and dissent, actual and virtual, were understood to
have become increasingly centreless and leaderless across the 1990s, and
beyond. Even the nature of protest and dissent fell away from previous
models, as aligned to pragmatic demands and manifestos, single issues
and norms of controlled civil disobedience. Now the masses were
understood not to assemble behind any one position, or rally to one
slogan, but more to stand in a kind of collective negative correlation
to the faltering status quo: a crowd of singularities. This crowd or
mass has been identified and explored in various ways as “the multitude”
by theorists such as Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri, Paolo Virno, The
Invisible Committee, Mauricio Lazzarato, and Franco Berardi among others.
The roots of this turn have been related to the political disorientation
of the “post-ideological” wake of 1989, with the growth of intellectual
and network-based labour, economic migration and a precarious substrata
of a “grey collar” workforce, the heightened policing of traveller and
off-the-grid lifestyles, the coexistence of the Global South and Global
North in megacities, and the supposed vanishing of the traditional
working classes in the West. And a neoliberal response to the rise of
these networks has come in attempts to co-opt grass root strategies of
change: rainbow revolutions; Black Bloc infiltration and provocations;
people’s protests as invited and allied to IMF reformism (or even
cautious support, as with Live8); various forms of middle-class crowd
funding and crowd sourcing; identity politics calibrations to “liberal
interventionism” in the name of “freedom” (rather than human rights).
This proposed edited collection will seek to critically engage with the
body of thought around the concept of multitude in two main respects.
Firstly, we welcome philosophically-inclined attempts at interrogating
or rethinking the concept of multitude, taking into account criticisms
produced by various cohorts on the Left and by its outstanding spokesmen
(such as Slavoj Zizek, Jodi Dean and Jacques Ranciere, among others),
over the last two decades. Between the poles of uncritical praising of
constituent creativity of the “many” and the recent attempts to rethink
the “one” as a form of mobilising popular authority (in the form of the
leader or the Party) there is a space for mediation which cannot be
theoretically and politically ignored. In tracing the trajectory of the
developing idea of multitude from early political-philosophical
modernity to the Italian and international debates from the 1990s to the
present, we encounter the concept of the State, various subcategories of
the political subject (crowd, mass, people, class, Party) but also new
concepts and phenomena such as the common, “form of life,”
individuation, the biopolitical, the Event, the post-national,
queerness, the migrant, the refugee, as well as the economic and
political crises in Europe and globally, which broke surface in 2008 and
continue to reverberate. We maintain that, in spite of being met with
quick rejections and losing traction in the ephemeral cycle of
theoretical fashions and jargon in leftist academia and activist
circles, the idea to which the name ”multitude” gestures can be more
productively reconsidered as a theoretical framework for the analysis of
new and coming forms of social and political existence, and struggles
they imply, as well as of their cultural formations and “codes” already
established in previous decades. Secondly, we welcome engagements with
respect to: cultural artefacts (from popular culture to the
avant-garde); technological enablings of protest; the artefacts of and
occurrences of protest and civil unrest; mainstream and independent
reportage of dissent; the structures and organisation of new modes of
dissent and protest; radical refusal; production of new subjectivities;
co-option of dissent, and more.
This summative work of revisiting and, potentially, displacing or
extending the concept of multitude and its applications in theoretical,
cultural and political praxis now needs to be achieved. We ask: What
does this contentious concept, the ‘multitude’, stand for? What is the
inner temporality and historicity of the multitude (if any)? What are
the real and potential relations between multitude and political
organisation? Can we identify new forms of organisation, which take into
account the dimension of the “many”? What is or was the culture of the
multitude? What are the political applications and meanings of the
“multitude”, as developed in various geopolitical areas of the globe
(“the South” and “the North”, and their interzones)? What forms and
languages of communication were developed? What forms of artistic
expression and experimentation illuminate this abstract and protean
idea? (And how does the idea of multitude help us to read otherwise
difficult artistic texts?) How was political power understood and
utilised? How are we to account for the churn of protest groupings
(anti-globalisation; anti-war; anti-austerity, #Occupy and beyond)? How
does the contemporary 24/7 society of late capitalism affects the nature
of labour and political mobilisations? What is the impact of
“algorithmic cooperation” based on Internet and mobile communications?
How can the new dissident cultures of leaking and security breaches
contribute to our understanding of the actual political power exerted
over the masses? What are the precarious dynamics of new activisms, and
how are we to address and assess the widespread phenomena of “burning
out” and exhaustion? What is the prehistory of multitude? What is its
present, and what could be its future? Is the Idea of communism still
its horizon and can we, perhaps, retroactively recognise the hidden
features of the multitude in the experiences of the “real communisms” of
the twentieth century? 20th century? Can we now speak of a
“post-multitude”, which was partly institutionalised, objectified and
thus deactivated in the corporations-owned social networks, but may
possibly still be re-activated again?
Proposals of 600 words maximum should be in a Word document (not a PDF),
with minimal formatting. Please also include (in the same document), and
as independent of this word count: name; email and postal address; title
and affiliation(s); recent publications / creative outputs; any further
relevant biographical information. Please email Drs Benjamin Halligan
and Alexei Penzin (atb.halligan /at/ wlv.ac.uk)
<mailto:(b.halligan /at/ wlv.ac.uk)>(anda.penzin /at/ wlv.ac.uk)
<mailto:(a.penzin /at/ wlv.ac.uk)>by 1 October 2016. A submission deadline for
authors is envisaged for 1 July 2017 (with a possible
conference/symposium a few months prior), with a view to publication in
2018/19.
Dr Benjamin Halligan is Director of the Doctoral College of the
University of Wolverhampton. Publications include/Michael
Reeves/(Manchester UP, 2003),/Desires for Reality: Radicalism and
Revolution in Western European Film/(Berghahn, 2016), and the co-edited
collections/Mark E. Smith and The Fall: Art, Music and
Politics/(Ashgate, 2010),/Reverberations: The Philosophy, Aesthetics and
Politics of Noise/(Continuum, 2012),/Resonances: Noise and Contemporary
Music/(Bloomsbury Academic, 2013),/The Music Documentary: Acid Rock to
Electropop/(Routledge, 2013), and/The Arena Concert: Music, Media and
Mass Entertainment/(Bloomsbury Academic, 2015).
Dr Alexei Penzin is Reader at the Faculty of Arts of the University of
Wolverhampton, and Associated Research Fellow at the Institute of
Philosophy (Moscow). Penzin has written articles for journals such
as/Rethinking Marxism/,/Mediations/and/South Atlantic Quarterly/as well
as chapters for many edited collections. He also published the essay/Rex
Exsomnis/(Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2012) as a part of the dOCUMENTA13 series,
and co-edited and authored prefaces to the Russian translations of books
by Fredric Jameson and Paolo Virno. Penzin’s/Against the Continuum:
Sleep and Subjectivity in Capitalist Modernity/is forthcoming for
Bloomsbury Academic. Penzin is a member of the group Chto Delat (What is
to Be Done?) and a member of editorial boards of the
journal/Stasis/(Saint Petersburg) and the/Moscow//Art Magazine/.
---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier and ECREA.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Chauss�de Waterloo 1151, 1180 Uccle, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]