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[Commlist] Call for Abstracts: "Thomas Project. A border journal for utopian thoughts"
Mon Jun 17 10:25:00 GMT 2019
*Call for Abstracts 30th June: "Thomas Project. A border journal for
utopian thoughts"*
*Next issue: UTOPIA AS A FORM OF LIFE*
http://www.thomasproject.net/call-ii-utopia-as-form-of-life-lutopia-come-forma-di-vita-a-utopia-como-forma-de-vida/
<http://www.thomasproject.net/call-ii-utopia-as-form-of-life-lutopia-come-forma-di-vita-a-utopia-como-forma-de-vida/>
*
*
Francesco Biagi, Gianfranco Ferraro, Manuel Masini (eds.)
How can we think of utopia today? Is there any location now for its
“spirit”? How can we reflect on the traditions of utopian thought by
starting with the question about an “elsewhere” placed by our present?
And how can we reflect on the meaning of a /kairos/, of a /here and now
which is other/, of a permanent “alternative history” redrawing the time
starting from a waiting perspective?
Can utopia – through its various motifs but above all through its call
to a world which is an alternative to a life which is otherwise –
present a gap in relation to the forms of life of the present time?
The proposal of this issue is to continue the research developed by
authors over the last few years – such as Miguel Abensour, Luciano
Canfora and Pierre Macherey – which is to think through a different
point of view within the modern utopian tradition. Also, via authors
such as Pierre Hadot, Michel Foucault and Emil Cioran, we are attempting
to reflect on some of possible routes which oblige us to think again on
modern utopias from the age of humanism in More, Campanella and Bacon to
those of Fourier, Blanqui and Proudhon, and to the ones represented by
the forms of life from the revolutionaries of the nineteenth and
twentieth century. What is also at stake is the tradition of
“conversion” or the archaeology of “other” forms of living. Specific
attention will be given to the relation between utopia and prophecy.
This relation can be considered from a contemporary point of view –
through the conflicted and fertile connection between these two concepts
(starting from the study of the respective semantic fields to their
theoretical projection in W. Benjamin, G. Lukács, A. da Silva, E.
Buonaiuti, K. Löwith, P. Ricoeur, E. Cioran), and with the attempt of
rewriting utopian and prophetic thought.
As explained by Ernst Bloch, a “spirit of utopia” always continues to
exist where the horizons of history and existence appear as more static.
In this sense, the fall of the great ideologies do not necessarily
correspond (which is also due to the distinctions made by Mannheim) to
the demise of that spirit. Here we can perhaps identify one of the main
elements of utopia which is that it can be embodied in forms of
meditation about an “elsewhere”. This helps us to think more about the
“present” place – as it was conceived in 1516 when More wrote about the
fantastic journey of the Portuguese sailor Hythlodaeus, alongside with
the much more real Florentine explorer Amerigo Vespucci. This can be
incorporated into practices of literature and art. More’s /Utopia/ seems
to be implying that an alternative form of society can be realized in
the present vision of the “elsewhere”, and of the constant becoming of a
present looking to an unpredictable future. Through their connections
with the ancient traditions, the Platonic /kallipoleis/ or the “other
worlds” of the religious experiences, utopia and modern chiliasm or
messianism continue to “cause problems” or put in question the forms of
every power and truth.
Moreover, at the threshold of modernity, utopia and apocalyptic
prophecies meet. For example, in Joachimism (and also in the long
tradition that is connected to it) and Thomas Müntzer, the
ancient/ beyond/ is taken to an /elsewhere/ that has to be realized on
the earth, and this idea will emerge many times in the following centuries.
Thus, what is the relation, connection and difference between modern
utopia and modern prophecy?
The positive notion of utopia, proposed for instance by Abensour and
Macherey, is compared to the one that collapsed and was rejected at the
end of the last century as the harmful remains of violent and
authoritarian ages. In addition to being archaic, utopia was considered
an accessory of the totalitarianism of the “short 20th century” (to use
Hobsbawm’s expression). Abensour attempts to restore its value to the
utopian imagination which is connected to radical, critical thought. He
does this by following an interpretation of Marx’s thought that does not
underestimate nor overlook utopian socialism; rather it acknowledges its
influence and link by changing the images of dream into a political
theory of historical action. In this sense, heretical Marxist communism
does not reject utopia; it connects it with action and social
transformation (also through a prophetic ground that never disappeared
in Marx’s thought – which was pointed out in Eduardo Sanguineti’s
reading of some of Marx’s key-texts). Also, in different ways than
Abensour, Macherey reaffirms that utopia, which now becomes “concrete”,
is not simply contemplative, but rather it is an incitement to
subversive action. In fact, it is opposed to the dystopic regime of
modernity, and it imagines an alternative – which occurred in the Paris
Commune and all the historical and literary breaches whose utopian
thought was somehow (as well as the lines of immanent prophetic thought)
a driving force. In this sense, utopia and prophecy together are a call
that does not go away but rather represents themselves in the shadows of
the present.
What is at the stake is the challenge to respond again to the call of
utopia, to understand how its spirit, although it does not expect the
realization of forms, and be able to transform philosophy, politics,
art, and the spaces where we live – such in as our cities and our
bodies. Are we perhaps – as Abensour asked – something more than
political, utopian animals? And how, as women and men of the 21st
century, /do/ we and /can/ we live as utopian animals? How can we
actually express it?
Our issue has an interdisciplinary vocation: political thought and
philosophy are the background starting at the point in which it is
possible to suggest theological, sociological and anthropological
considerations in theories of art, literature, cinema, urbanism, and
utopian and landscape architecture. The editors hope to stimulate and
open up a point of view aimed to deconstruct a perspective that is often
merely Eurocentric and Western.
*To Submit the Abstract:*
The abstract (in english, or portuguese, or italian, or french, or
spanish) must be no longer than 600 words and has to include a clear
summary of the structure and main arguments of the proposed article. The
abstract must also stress its originality and relevance for the volume,
and include five references from the secondary bibliography. Please
include in your email the name of the author(s), your possible
institutional membership and address. The abstract must be sent in doc
and pdf format to the following email address:
(_redazionethomasproject /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(redazionethomasproject /at/ gmail.com)>_
*Timetable and Deadlines:*
30th June: submission of the abstract
15th July: response to the authors
15th September: submission of the article
15th September – 15th October: peer-review process
30th October: final submission of the article
30th October – 30th November: editorial review
December: issue.
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