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[Commlist] CFP: Against the Grain: The Ethics, Poetics and Politics of Contrarian Speech
Thu Mar 28 20:26:16 GMT 2019
*Against the Grain: The Ethics, Poetics and Politics of Contrarian Speech*
Symposium at the University of Amsterdam, *5*^*th* *– 7*^*th* *June 2019*
Keynote speakers: Sarah Clancy, Jim Hicks, Frank Keizer
*Deadline for proposals: 15*^*th* *April 2019*
Dates: The event will commence in the late afternoon of 5^th June and
end by early afternoon of 7^th June
A collaboration of ‘Contemporary Poetry and Politics’ (FFI2016-77584-P),
The Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis, The Amsterdam Center for
Globalization Studies, and the Netherlands Institute for Cultural Analysis.
Organizers: Cornelia Gräbner (Lancaster University), Joost de Bloois
(University of Amsterdam).
Contrarianism gains momentum whenever a hegemony consolidates itself to
such an extent that there is no longer space for the possibility of
alternatives. The aims and the character of contrarian movements show
themselves through the interplay of ethics, politics and poetics in
concrete examples of contrarian speech and contrarian practices. With
the symposium ‘Against the Grain: The Ethics, Poetics and Politics of
Contrarian Speech’ we open up a space for the analytical exploration of
this interplay, and for a sharing of practices that oppose both the
/status quo/ of corporatism and neoliberalization, and the contrarian
movements appropriating ‘free speech’ from the populist right, the
alt-right, and neo-fascism.
Contrarianism can be a mode of getting to know the opponent from a
committed position or perspective and, through this analytical practice,
can produce dissident knowledges. Contrarianism can be a form of
expression; in the face of a stifling hegemony, its poetics can nurture
desires and open up new horizons. Contrarian practice can take many
forms, among them opposition, resistance, dissent, non-cooperation,
contestation, subversion, or sabotage. It can be practiced from within a
system, from its margins, or from an outsider position. Today,
contrarianism is also weaponized as a rhetorical strategy by political
movements that seek to consolidate or radicalize existing power
structures (be it regarding class, gender or race), or obfuscate their
ruthless pursuit of their economic interests. The contrarian defiance of
supposed ‘political correctness’ and the left-liberal ‘elite’ in no
small measure has contributed to the success of such movements. This
symposium, a collaboration between the research project ‘Contemporary
Poetry and Politics’ (FFI2016-77584-P) and the University of Amsterdam,
approaches contrarian speech by bringing together the poetic and the
analytical, ethics and politics.
We specifically (but not exclusively) invite attention to the interplay
of poetic and political sensibilities with discourses and practices of
contrarian speech in the discussion of five thematic areas:
*
*Dissent, Disobedience and Free Speech*: We invite contributions
that explore the notion of ‘free speech’ in contexts where free
speech is turned into a means of pacification, or where it is
weaponized against minorities or by economic elites against imagined
cultural elites. What does ‘contrarian speech’ mean in such
contexts, how might its boundaries be defined and set?
*
*Austerity and Precarity*: In the wake of the 2008 economic crisis
and the subsequent ‘austerity’ measures that have been rolled out
all over Europe, class differences and socio-economic precarity have
increased substantially. Tremendous social suffering has been
inflicted, and structural violence against vulnerable populations
has been escalated, and the TINA (There Is No Alternative) ideology
has strangulated the political imagination. The emergence of
movements such as ‘Occupy, the Indignados or Nuit Debout indicates
increasing resistance to neoliberal TINA (There Is No Alternative)
ideology. We invite explorations of social justice and opposition to
class privilege, contrarianism and right-wing populism, and even the
alt-right and extreme right.
*
*Crisis: *Hand-in-hand with the creation and perpetuation of social
and political crisis comes the resurgence of discourses of security
which appropriate and manipulate fear. We invite critical analyses
of such discourses, and the role of contrarian speech in opposing
these, whereby the analyses account for the consequences of social
injustice, legal and political surveillance, and precarization.
*
*Ecocriticism and Infrastructure*: We invite engagements with the
ideologies of progress and modernity, with the practice of corporate
power and the ideology of corporatism, with the ways in which
infrastructures embed habituation and complacency into everyday life
and perception, and with the expressions, practices and ecocritical
approaches that go contrarian to it.
*
*Creative Criticism*: This practice of knowledge and of writing goes
contrarian to the ever more stringent, restrictive, constraining,
disciplinarian and secretly ideological practices of academic
writing that are being imposed on academics. Creative criticism gets
to know its opponent progressively and, while opposing and
subverting them, creates ‘Other’ writing practices that subvert the
binary of creativity and criticism and create space for dissident
knowledges.
*
*Anti-Fascism, the Alt-Right, and Right-Wing Populism: *Anti-fascist
movements and anti-fascist artists and cultural organizers have
always had to go against two opponents at the same time: the
right-wing, populist and /or fascist movements and individuals that
go contrarian to the status quo, /and/ to a status quo that is often
marked by social injustice, that is usually hostile to anti-fascists
and often, tolerant of fascist and right-wing populist movements. We
invite explorations of such doubly contrarian practices and
explorations, as well as of the ways in which fascist movements, the
Alt-Right and right-wing populism pose as contrarian to the /status
quo/.
Contributions may cover (but are not limited to):
*
Contemporary political movements/events
*
Contemporary political art (i.e. poetry, literature, visual art,
cinema)
*
Media representations of contrarian speech
*
Cultural/artistic representations of crisis/precarity/austerity
*
Ecocritical dissidence
*
Contrarianism, hegemony and conjuncture
*
Far-right discourse on/as contrarianism
*
Free speech, sexism and heteronormativity (i.e. online sexism and
heteronormativity)
*
Media representations of ‘free speech’
*
Free speech, contrarianism and the construction/limits of the public
sphere
*
‘Contrarian’ and ‘free speech’ as political trope
*
Contrarianism as Foucauldian parreisia
*
Contrarianism, dissent and social media
*
Contrarianism and/as privilege
*
Contrarianism as noise
*
Class and contrarianism (i.e. class analysis, class struggle as
contrarianism)
*
Artistic and philosophical/theoretical responses to free speech
controversies
*
Contrarianism/free speech and anti-terrorism (i.e. Erri de Luca’s
work, the ‘Tarnac affair’)
*
Free speech and racialized exclusion
*
Contrarianism and sabotage
*
Free speech, surveillance and contemporary governmentality
*
Artistic and creative practices of ‘contrarianism’
*
Poetry and crisis
*
Assembly as contrarian practice (i.e. Nuit debout, Occupy)
*
Contrarianism as ethics
*
Contrarianism as crisis discourse (i.e. ecocritical voices,
eco-politics, movements concerning climate change/extinction)
*
Contrarianism and gender formation (i.e. on social media forums)
*
Contrarianism and negativity
*
Contrarianism as ethics of refusal and inoperativity
*
Contrarianism as affirmative ethics/politics
*
Contrarianism as -ism
*To submit a proposal please send a title, an abstract of 250 words and
a short biography of 100 words by **15*^*th* *April to
(dinolipoe /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(dinolipoe /at/ gmail.com)> *
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