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[ecrea] CFP: Populism conference, Essex June 2017
Wed Mar 29 05:50:05 GMT 2017
Populism and ‘Constructing a People’
Ideology and Discourse Analysis International Conference 2017
2nd – 3rd June 2017
[Call for Abstracts]
Deadline: 22nd April 2017
Contact: (IDAconference2017 /at/ gmail.com)
Facebook : www.fb.com/IDACON2017
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KEYNOTE:
William E. Connolly (Johns Hopkins University)
Confirmed Speakers:
Jorge Lago (PODEMOS)
Jane Bennet (John Hopkins University)
Aletta Norval (University of Essex)
David Howarth (University of Essex)
Paolo Gerbaudo (King’s College London)
Mark Devenney (University of Brighton)
“The construction of the ‘people’ is the political act par excellence”
––Ernesto Laclau
In these turbulent and divisive times, democratic societies face a
series of emerging problems: increasing opposition to globalization; the
legitimacy crisis of the European Union qua the electoral success of
anti-establishment and populist politics; the resurgence of nationalism
and an accompanying rise in violence towards women, ethnic and religious
minorities; unprecedented migrant and refugee geographic displacements;
skepticism towards democratic and parliamentary institutions; challenges
to neoliberal hegemony, to name a few. In 2016, a shocking and
unpredictable year for international politics, the global democratic
polity witnessed a drastic set of changes and upheavals. In light of
these developments, how can perspectives from different disciplines
offer new insights and analytical tools that successfully thematize
current manifestations of ‘the political’?
Ernesto Laclau, founder of the Ideology and Discourse Analysis (IDA)
programme at the University of Essex, argued that the creation of any
truly political project necessarily involves the symbolic construction
of a ‘people’. In this articulatory practice, a heterogeneous set of
demands are unified together into equivalential chains; antagonistic
frontiers that constitute the terrain of ‘the political’. Might this
theoretical logic offer a tool to analyse current political events and
lay the ground for alternative political projects? Or do such claims
merely represent what Slavoj Žižek once pejoratively referred to as the
‘populist temptation’?
At this conference, we intend to set up a meeting place for academics,
activists, students and the public to debate the form, content and
theoretical underpinnings of conventional and alternative political
projects, particularly with reference to various competing notions of
the term ‘populism’.
We welcome 15-minute presentations with abstracts of 250-300 words
(max.) in the fields of philosophy, political theory, political science,
psychoanalysis, sociology, and cultural studies related to:
Populism · Radical Democracy · Post-Structuralist Discourse theory ·
Radical Politics · New Social Movements (NSMs) · Feminism(s) ·
Cognitive/Affective theory · Rhetoric · Critique(s) of Neoliberalism ·
Media and Political Communication
Attendees are welcome to join for one or both of the 2 days of the
conference. A free social will be held on the evening of the first day
(2nd June).
Attendance is free however a secured place can be reserved.
Ticket link Day 1 (Free) : http://bit.ly/2lvHNu3
Ticket link Day 2 (Free) : http://bit.ly/2kwxY0C
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