CALL FOR PAPERS
20-22 July 2016,
Humanities Research Centre
Australian National University
Invited
Keynotes: Louise Amoore (Durham, UK), Chiara Bottici (New School NYC), Davide
Panagia (UCLA), Dimitris Vardoulakis (Western Sydney University)
Forms of authority inhabit aesthetic events and practices, and
equally suffuse political and social discourse. The intersection of these
modalities is attracting unprecedented attention amongst contemporary political
and critical theorists. Judith Butler, Jacques Rancière, Bonnie Honig, William
Connolly, James Tully, Giorgio Agamben — and behind them figures as diverse as
Arendt, Freud, Derrida, Deleuze, Benjamin, Wittgenstein and Nietzsche — all
integrate political interpretation and critical reconstruction with lessons
drawn from literary histories and artistic practices. The aesthetic forms in
which authority is embedded (for example via tropes of realism, melodrama,
reportage, abstraction, and tradition) animate political economy and theology.
They also invite alternative modes of reflection and interrogation.
In opening the question of the power as well as the fragility of
authority’s ‘forms’, certain contemporary political practices of dispossession
might become ambivalent; harking back, perhaps, to the Dionysian moment that
according to Nietzsche undoes identities ossified into hierarchy, dominance and
mistrust. This conference aims to explore how key dimensions of contemporary
political life obtain authority, visibility and contestability in aesthetic
forms—literature, poetry, drama, cinema, painting, sculpture. Can plural
sovereignties and the modes of constitution of authority in law/lore become
more visible through aesthetic attention? How do critical
approaches to international human rights regimes work
through aesthetic forms? Do the divisions inherent in authority, especially where there are
long histories of violence, conflict or oppression, particularly demand an aesthetic
critique or (re)-mediation? How might an aesthetic register for thinking
politics emancipate the material world from merely being man’s ‘object’,
generating new institutional forms apt to the challenges of today?
Our call for papers invites both critical and reconstructive work
in the relationship between aesthetics and politics as it pertains to the
question of authority.
To submit an abstract, register
your interest, or find out more, contact the organizers, Fiona
Jenkins
(Philosophy) and Desmond
Manderson
(CASS/Law)
Closing date: 18 March 2016
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