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[ecrea] cfp: scapegoats, violence, and mimetic theory - 21st International Summer School in Cultural Studies
Wed Feb 14 22:55:35 GMT 2018
Deadline for applications: March 5
Please distribute freely!
*SCAPEGOATS, VIOLENCE, AND MIMETIC THEORY*
*21^st INTERNATIONAL SUMMER SCHOOL IN CULTURAL STUDIES*
*University of Jyväskylä, Finland, June 4−6, 2018*
*Society for Cultural Studies in Finland and the Research Centre for
Contemporary Culture*
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*https://kultut.fi/summer-school/
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*
In the present times, the media landscape is loaded with representations
of violence in which a group attacks another group or an individual.
Also, venomous and inculpatory ways of speaking are common especially in
social media such as Twitter. Understanding violence in a broad sense,
the increase of hate speech and the strong presence of violence in the
media as well as popular culture challenge interpretations of the
decrease of violence in the present times. Rather, it could be proposed
that the ways of violence have multiplied as it nowadays entails also
various forms of verbal, indirect or latent as well as mediated forms of
violence. Occasionally violence also seeps into practices that at first
glance seem to be fighting against it.
Although the phenomena described above vary from direct violence to
aggressive ways of commenting on it, a common factor can be pointed,
i.e. scapegoat mechanism. Scapegoat mechanism occurs when a community or
a group of people seeks release of its violent tensions by projecting
them into a victim chosen from the margins of the community that the
group believes to be the origin of its anguish. However, being innocent
of the actual cause of the group’s hostile feelings, the victim is a
surrogate victim i.e. a scapegoat. René Girard’s mimetic theory serves
as a frame for studying scapegoat mechanism. According to Girard,
violence touches everybody as it is the side effect of universally
operating mimetic desire which leads to mimetic rivalry and violent
tensions that seek their release through scapegoat mechanism, as well as
sacrificial rituals, its mimetic siblings. As a tool for the regulation
of violence, scapegoat mechanism is of course paradoxical as it operates
through violence thus producing violence at the same time as it aims at
preventing its escalation.
In the 21^st summer school of cultural studies the approach to the topic
is multidisciplinary. The research may focus for example on a media
text, online discussion, television series, or a literary work.
Methodologically, various analytic tools may be applied such as
discourse analysis, ethnography, narratology, and semiotics. Especially
pivotal in Girard’s theory in this context are the questions connected
to scapegoats and violence but perspectives focusing more generally on
mimetic desire, violence, crisis, sacrifice, or religion are welcome as
well. The topics to be explored include: scapegoats and media,
scapegoats and politics, religion and scapegoats, mimesis of violence,
mimetic desire and violence, gender and scapegoat mechanisms, and
scapegoats and literature/art. Also, the core questions can be
approached from other theoretical perspectives such as in the contexts
of the work of Marcel Mauss, Maurice Halbwach, or Georges Bataille. Like
Girard’s, their thinking can be traced back to the legacy of Émile Durkheim.
The summer school addresses the questions of scapegoats, violence, and
mimetic theory through lectures and seminar presentations based on the
latest research. Acknowledged experts serve as teachers, and they will
deliver open lectures on the topic, and provide commentary on and
feedback to the student papers presented. The Summer School is a
three-day intensive period of supervising doctoral candidates and
discussing research projects in a multidisciplinary group, within the
joint framework of cultural studies in a broad sense of the term.
All papers will be commented upon and discussed by the distinguished
summer school teachers:
*Tiina Arppe* is adjunct professor in Sociology specialized in French
social theory. In her scientific publications, she has studied
problematics related to the sacred, community, and affect in the work of
Rousseau, Durkheim, Bataille, Baudrillard, and Girard. Her major works
include /Pyhän jäännökset/ (Tutkijaliitto 1992), /Affectivity and the
Social Bond/ (Ashgate 2014), and /Uskonto ja väkivalta. Durkheimin
perilliset/ (2016). Currently, in a project funded by Kone Foundation,
Arppe looks into the connections of economy and death in French social
theory. Arppe has also translated French theory classics as well as for
example Thorsten Veblen’s /The Leisure Class/ into Finnish.
*Hanna Mäkelä* is University Lecturer of Comparative Literature (fixed
term) at the University of Helsinki where she took her PhD, which was
co-supervised at the Justus Liebig University Giessen, in 2014. Her
doctoral thesis, /Narrated Selves and Others: A Study of Mimetic Desire
in Five Contemporary British and American Novels/, combines René
Girard’s philosophical anthropology with the field of narratology in
order to demonstrate how Girard’s mimetic theory can be employed as a
narrative poetics of its own in the context of more mainstream literary
studies.
Mäkelä is currently working on a postdoctoral monograph on the subject
of inner change in narrative film. She has published the following
peer-reviewed articles: “Horizontal Rivalry, Vertical Transcendence:
Identity and Idolatry in Muriel Spark’s /The Prime of Miss Jean/
/Brodie/ and Donna Tartt’s /The Secret History/” (/The/ /Poetics of
Transcendence/, Rodopi / Brill, 2015), “Player in the Dark: Mourning the
Loss of the Moral Foundation of Art in Woody Allen’s /Match Point/”
(/Turning Points. Concepts and Narratives of Change in Literature and
Other Media, /de Gruyter, 2012) and “Imitators and Observers: Mimetic
and Elegiac Character Relationships in Donna Tartt’s /The Secret
History/ and Siri Hustvedt’s /What I Loved/” (/Genre and
Interpretation/, 2010, the University of Helsinki Department of Finnish,
Finno-Ugrian and Scandinavian Studies / The Finnish Graduate School of
Literary Studies).
**
*HOW TO APPLY*
Please send your application by*Monday, March 5, 2018* to
minna.m.nerg[at]jyu.fi
Or by post to
Kulttuurintutkimuksen seura
PL 35
40014 Jyväskylän yliopisto
Society for Cultural Studies in Finland
P.O. Box 35
FI-40014 University of Jyväskylä
Finland
Your application should include
1. An abstract of 500 words, based on the paper you will be presenting.
2. A short presentation of yourself and your research topic with its
theoretical orientation, methods, and materials.
The applicants will be notified of the decision by *Friday, March 16.*
Deadline for papers is *Monday, May 21.* Length of the papers is 10–15
pages. More information on them will be sent out later.
There is a participation fee of 100 euros per person. Fee covers
coffee/tea and snacks during the seminar.
For more information e-mail minna.m.nerg[at]jyu.fi (or
eeva.rohas[a]jyu.fi), phone +358 (0)50 599 8842, or visit http://kultut.fi.
<http://kultut.fi/>
Kulttuurintutkimuksen seura ry | Yhdistyksen verkkosivusto
<http://kultut.fi/>
kultut.fi
Yhdistyksen verkkosivusto
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