[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP: Money Talks: Futures for the Economic Humanities
Tue Feb 25 17:22:12 GMT 2025
CFP: Money Talks: Futures for the Economic Humanities
Web page:
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/future_of_money_in_the_humanities/conference-money-talks-futures-for-the-economic-humanities/
<https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/future_of_money_in_the_humanities/conference-money-talks-futures-for-the-economic-humanities/>
University of Edinburgh, 28–29 May 2025
Keynote Speakers:
Dr Devin Singh (Dartmouth College)
Dr Rachel O’Dwyer (National College of Art and Design, Dublin)
Over the past decade, growing numbers of researchers in the arts and
humanities have turned their attention to questions of money, finance,
and the economy. At the same time, social scientists have increasingly
drawn on humanities-based methodologies in their analyses of economic
phenomena. "Money Talks: Futures for the Economic Humanities" is a
landmark conference dedicated to mapping this emerging interdisciplinary
space and charting its multiple potential futures.
Much cutting-edge research into economics and the economy has coalesced
around concepts and approaches conventionally associated with humanities
scholarship. Theorists of money, for example, have sought to understand
its nature and function historically (by investigating origins and
patterns of development); philosophically (in light of money’s
confounding of standard ontological and epistemological categories);
literarily (as homologous to literary forms such as realism or
modernism); narratively or hermeneutically (with attention to the
powerfully charged myths and meanings bound up with monetary objects);
materially and visually (considering the material cultures and semiotic
dimensions of money); theologically (as an essentially sacred phenomenon
that retains vestiges of its divine underpinnings); or performatively
(in terms of money’s self-authorizing capacities, as spectacularly
dramatized in recent years by the rise of cryptocurrencies).
Similar intellectual paradigms and frameworks have guided research into
areas ranging from financial markets, central banks, digital and data
economies, and accounting practices to cultural industries, labour and
consumption dynamics, housing and construction sectors, and renewable
and circular economies. This conference aims to bring together
researchers working within and across such areas to explore common
approaches and share empirical and theoretical insights. It will
showcase the state of the art in the Economic Humanities and reflect on
emerging tendencies and future directions.
The organizers encourage submissions from scholars based in arts and
humanities disciplines, in social scientific fields (including
economics, political economy, economic sociology and anthropology,
economic geography, cultural economy, social studies of finance, and
critical finance studies), and in all other relevant research areas.
Creative or practice-based presentations are welcomed, as are papers
exploring how arts and humanities research on money, finance, and the
economy can have impact and influence beyond the academy.
Potential topics include (but are not limited to):
*
*
- Knowledge: What counts as economic knowledge, and how might such
knowledge be expanded, deepened, enriched, and/or reconfigured?
- Theory: What meanings and assumptions are embedded in economic
theories and models, and with what effects?
- Practice: How do cultural patterns of sense-making shape economic
practices and the relation of economic models to real-world economies?
- Power: How is economic power exercised, and what capacity do
humanities-based approaches have to critique, resist, or redistribute
such power?
- Histories:**What forms have money, finance, or markets taken in the
past, and how might these forms defamiliarize or denaturalize
taken-for-granted economic assumptions today?
- Representation:How are economic phenomena represented (in literature,
theatre, film, art, popular culture, the media, and/or everyday life),
and how do such representations shape vernacular economic knowledges?
- Spaces:How are economic lifeworlds constructed relationally across
global space, and in particular via interactions between the Global
North and Global South?
- Temporalities: What does it mean to think the past, present, and
future in economic terms, and how do such conceptualizations relate to
questions of sustainability, climate transition, intergenerational
justice, or political strategy?
- Identities: How does economic life intersect with aspects of identity
(including race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, age, religion, and
dis/ability), and how are these intersections manifest ideologically,
semiotically, and/or discursively?
- Values: What assumptions are embedded in prevailing conceptions of
value and what resources (e.g. ethical, religious, imaginative, utopian)
might be available to rethink them?
- Faith: How are money and other economic phenomena bound up with faith,
belief, and the sacred, and what contributions can different faith
traditions make to monetary and economic thought?
- Rationality: How should we understand recent challenges to
long-prevailing assumptions of baseline rationality in mainstream
economics (e.g. behavioural economics), and how might we expand and
radicalize them?
- Method: What is at stake in bringing humanities methods to bear on
economic questions, and how do we assemble rigorous and robust
methodological frameworks for such research?
- Pedagogy: How is economic education currently constituted, and how
might it be conducted differently?
- Futures: What new research paradigms should be pursued in the Economic
Humanities, and how do they relate to the wider challenge of envisaging
the economy of the future?
In addition to keynote lectures and panel presentations, the conference
will experiment with an innovative "Laboratory of Economic Concepts,"
consisting of workshops focused on keywords from the economic lexicon,
and drawing on participants’ varied disciplinary and intellectual
perspectives to illuminate the terms’ genealogies, meanings, and
potential reinventions.
Please send proposals for individual papers (max. 250 words) or
three-paper panels (tomoneytalksconf /at/ gmail.com) byFriday 28 March 2025.
Notifications of acceptance will be issued by Friday 4 April.
"Money Talks: Futures for the Economic Humanities" is supported by the
College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences at the University of
Edinburgh and the Royal Society of Edinburgh-funded Thinking the Future
of Money in the Humanities project.
Organizers: Professor Paul Crosthwaite (Literatures, Languages, and
Cultures) and Professor Rachel Muers (Divinity)
---------------
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/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]