[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP 2022 ICA Pre-conference: Critique, post-Critique and the Present Conjuncture
Tue Dec 21 19:54:43 GMT 2021
*2022 International Communication Association (ICA)
pre-conference:/Critique, post-Critique and the Present Conjuncture/*
*//*
/in collaboration with the/
Culture/cultures/CREA 370 research group
(François Cusset, Veronique Rauline and Thierry Labica)
Université Paris Nanterre
*//*
*Hybrid format: *Online and Université Paris
Nanterre<https://www.parisnanterre.fr/m-thierry-labica>
*Date and time: *Wednesday May 25, 9.00pm to 6.00pm (CET)
*Conference registration fee:*$35.00 USD
*Keynote speakers *(with more to be confirmed):
François Cusset (Université Paris Nanterre)
Alan Finlayson (University of East Anglia)
Sahana Udupa (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München)
A commitment to critique – in its diverse theoretical forms and idioms –
is the defining ethos of scholarship attuned to the power dynamics of
academic research and knowledge production more generally. Critique
encourages us to interpret the given world suspiciously, often for very
good reasons. However, it can also be a “thought style” (Felski, 2015,
p. 2)with its own intellectual and political limitations. This
pre-conference will reflect on the place of critique in a political
moment that poses some distinct challenges to how critique is imagined
and practised in communication and media studies and elsewhere. It does
so from a perspective that is affirmative of critique, yet mindful that
“to be faithful to its core principle, critique must involve its
self-critique” (Fassin & Harcourt, 2019, p. 3). It also invites
perspectives and contributions from different fields and disciplines. We
think the question of critique should summon a healthy disregard for
disciplinary strictures and imperatives, and demand engagement with all
the paradoxes and tensions of the present conjuncture.
Three rather different conjunctural developments justify discussion of
this topic now. First, authors in different fields have questioned the
condition of critique by invoking the notion of “post-critique” (Anker &
Felski, 2017). This label has been read by some as signifying a
straightforward renunciation of critique. However, this characterization
annihilates the intellectual richness of some of the post-critique
literature, and we agree with Rita Felski’s (2015) observation that it
is “becoming ever more risible to conclude that any questioning of
critique can only be a reactionary gesture or a conservative conspiracy”
(p. 8). Similar arguments have been made by appealing to motifs like
“critique of critique” or “critique of the critical”, to signify how
critique can take forms that are formulaic and marketized (Billig,
2013), disenchanted from the political question of emancipation
(Rancière, 2011), or over-reliant on a rhetoric of moral denunciation
(Phelan, 2021). Work done under the heading of “critical university
studies” (Smyth, 2017)emphasizes, in turn, the need for meaningful
critique in the institutional universe that shapes scholarly identities
and practices, as an antidote to a critical gaze that directs its
attention exclusively outwards.
Second, critique is increasingly being represented in pejorative ways by
an ideologically heterogenous cast of political, cultural and media
actors, often self-styled academic dissidents. These figures sometimes
assume the mantle of the real critical thinkers unmasking the
politicized scholarship of left-wing academics, as if to dramatize Bruno
Latour’s (2004)fears about how the “weapons of social critique” can be
reappropriated (see also Tebaldi, 2021). These developments have gained
wider public visibility in far-right attacks against “critical race
theory” in the US (Goldberg, 2021). They are also expressed in a
generalized condemnation of “critical” and “postmodern” scholarship
across the humanities and social sciences. These anti-critique
discourses are produced in malleable forms (Jay, 2020)that circulate
easily across media cultures and national boundaries. They become part
of the ready-to-hand weaponry of “culture war” politics. The critical
academy is targeted for its role in the creation of an authoritarian
“woke” culture that, we are told, threatens sacred Enlightenment values.
Third, the university is now routinely depicted on the political right
as one of a number of elite social institutions (including “the media”)
that has been captured by “wokeness” and the forces of “cancel culture”
(Labica, 2021). Yet, in tandem with these discourses, it is not hard to
cite examples of how the culture of scholarly critique is being
“cancelled” in a rather different way by forces within and outside the
neoliberal university. This was exemplified by events at the University
of Leicester in 2021, when several critical management studies and
political economy academics(Halford, 2021)were made redundant for doing
research that was deemed to be at odds with the future strategic vision
of the university’s business school. It was illustrated in a June 2021
motion passed by Danish parliamentarians on the boundaries between
science and politics, which was described – in a letter co-signed by
over 3,000 academics – as an attack on “critical research and teaching”
in areas like “race, gender, migration and post-colonial studies”
(Myklebust, 2021). It also takes a distinctly French form in the image
of academic departments that have been taken over by the forces of
“islamo-gauchisme”, or in the assumption that even talking about race
indicates activist commitments at odds with a normative conception of
proper science (Dawes, 2020; Mohammed, 2021). Universities can, and do,
respond differently to external political attacks, and sometimes in ways
that affirm a principled commitment to scholarly critique. This was
illustrated by cross-university support for a September 2021 conference
/Dismantling Global Hindutva/, despite the “harassment and intimidation”
of speakers and organizers “by various Hindu right-wing groups and
individuals staunchly opposing the conference” (Naik, 2021).
Nonetheless, the transnational dynamics of such attacks point to the
normalization (Krzyżanowski, 2020)and mainstreaming (Mondon & Winter,
2020)of far-right discourses globally. It is not difficult to imagine a
dystopian future for the university where attacks against critical
academics become more common, or where the managerial class of more
universities capitulate to the agenda of reactionary publics.
*Format and papers*
Our description of the pre-conference theme is intended to be suggestive
rather than exhaustive: we welcome diverse paper proposals that confront
all the contradictions and possibilities of the current political
moment, both from a critical communication and media studies perspective
and a wider interdisciplinary horizon. The conference will be organized
as short keynote and roundtable panels that will create space for
conversation between panellists and audience questions. We also
encourage submissions that reflect plurality in terms of region, career
level, ethnicity, gender, class, disability and sexual orientation.
The format of the conference is hybrid. Speakers can present either in
person or online (the precise online platform is subject to
confirmation). The on-site gathering will take place at the Université
Paris Nanterre. Registration costs for paper presenters and in-person
attendees will be US$35, to help cover basic conference expenses,
including catering costs. We also hope to open the event (at no cost) to
a wider online audience.
Paper proposals should be submitted as short abstracts of 150 to 250
words (not counting references). They should be sent as PDF attachments
to the email address (critiqueICA2022 /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(critiqueICA2022 /at/ gmail.com)>, with the pre-conference title listed
in the abstract. The deadline for abstract submission is *Friday March
4, 2022.* Please also include a short bio note of 100 words maximum. And
please clarify how you are planning to attend the pre-conference,
indicating “don’t know yet” if you are not sure.
The pre-conference chairs are Sean Phelan (Massey University/University
of Antwerp), Simon Dawes (Université Versailles St-Quentin-en-Yvelines)
and Pieter Maeseele (University of Antwerp). Any questions about the
pre-conference should be emailed to Sean at (sean.phelan /at/ uantwerpen.be)
<mailto:(sean.phelan /at/ uantwerpen.be)>.
Abstracts should be framed as short provocations that speak clearly to
the pre-conference theme. Potential sub-themes include:
* Critique, the university and the politics of knowledge production
* Reflections on the post-critique debate
* Critique, post-critique and capitalism
* Critique, media and journalism
* Critique, post-critique and communication studies
* Critique and digital culture
* Critique, Marxism and socialism
* Critique, suspicion and reactionary politics
* Critique and the left
* Critique, race and racism
* Critique, gender, and gender theory
* Critique and the politics of social justice
* Critique and ideology
* Critique and critical discourse studies
* Critique, meaning and identity
* Critique, science and activism
* Anti-critique, critical theory and reactionary pedagogy
* Anti-critique and the transnational far right
* Far-right appropriation of critical discourse and signifiers
* **
*Advisory Committee *
*
*
Sarah Banet-Weiser (USC Annenberg)
Lilie Chouliaraki (LSE)
Mohan Dutta (Massey University)
Jayson Harsin (American University of Paris)
Thierry Labica (Université Paris Nanterre)
Robert Porter (University of Ulster)
Veronique Rauline (Université Paris Nanterre)
Gavan Titley (Maynooth University/University of Helsinki)
Sahana Udupa (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München)
*Institutional supporters *
ICA Division:**Philosophy, Theory and Critique
ICA Division: Race and Ethnicity in Communication
Department of Communication Studies, University of Antwerp
Centre d’histoire culturelle des sociétés contemporaines, Université de
Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines (UVSQ), France
Université Paris Nanterre**
*Selective references*
Billig, M. (2013). /Learn to Write Badly: How to Succeed in the Social
Sciences/. Cambridge University Press.
Dawes, S. (2020, November 2). The Islamophobic witch-hunt of
Islamo-leftists in France. o/penDemocracy/.
https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/can-europe-make-it/islamophobic-witch-hunt-islamo-leftists-france/
Fassin, D., & Harcourt, B. E. (2019). /A Time for Critique/. Columbia
University Press.
Felski, R. (2015). /The Limits of Critique/. University of Chicago Press.
Goldberg, D. T. (2021, May 2). The War on Critical Race Theory. /Boston
Review/.
https://bostonreview.net/race-politics/david-theo-goldberg-war-critical-race-theory
Halford, S. (2021, May 11). /BSA President writes to Leicester VC on the
proposed closure of Critical Management Studies and Political Economy/.
https://es.britsoc.co.uk/bsa-president-writes-to-leicester-vc-on-the-proposed-closure-of-critical-management-studies-and-political-economy/
Jay, M. (2020). /Splinters in Your Eye: Essays on the Frankfurt School/.
Verso Books.
Krzyżanowski, M. (2020). Normalization and the discursive construction
of “new” norms and “new” normality: Discourse in the paradoxes of
populism and neoliberalism. /Social Semiotics/, /30/(4), 431–448.
Labica, T. (2021, November 30). De l’ « islamogauchisme » au
« wokisme »: Blanquer et la cancel-culture des dominants –. /CONTRETEMPS
REVUE DE CRITIQUE COMMUNISTE/.
https://www.contretemps.eu/islamogauchisme-wokisme-decolonialisme-cancel-culture-blanquer/
Latour, B. (2004). Why Has Critique Run out of Steam? From Matters of
Fact to Matters of Concern. /Critical Inquiry/, /30/(Winter), 24.
Mohammed, M. (2021, May 14). Islamophobic Hegemony in France: Toward a
Point of No Return? /Berkley Forum/.
https://berkleycenter.georgetown.edu/responses/islamophobic-hegemony-in-france-toward-a-point-of-no-return
Mondon, A., & Winter, A. (2020). /Reactionary Democracy: How Racism and
the Populist Far Right Became Mainstream/. Verso Books.
Myklebust, J. P. (2021, June 10). Uproar as MPs claim university
research is ‘politicised.’ /University World News/.
https://www.universityworldnews.com/post.php?story=20210610103648390
Naik, R. H. (2021, September 7). US academic conference on ‘Hindutva’
targeted by Hindu groups. /Al
Jazeera./https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2021/9/7/us-academic-conference-dismantling-global-hindutva-hindu-right-wing-groups
Phelan, S. (2021). What’s in a name? Political antagonism and critiquing
‘neoliberalism.’ /Journal of Political Ideologies/, 1–20.
Rancière, J. (2011). /The Emancipated Spectator/. Verso Books.
Smyth, J. (2017). /The Toxic University: Zombie Leadership, Academic
Rock Stars and Neoliberal Ideology/. Springer.
Tebaldi, C. (2021). Speaking post-truth to power. /Review of Education,
Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies/, /43/(3), 205–225.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]