CFP 12.10.2001

Translating Class, Altering Hospitality (UK) (12/15/01;6/21/02-6/23/02)

Peter Nix

(12/15/01;6/21/02-6/23/02)
Date: Fri, 12 Oct 2001 16:49:43 +0000

Apologies for cross-posting and multiple deliveries!
AHRB CentreCATH (Director: Prof G Pollock)

CALL FOR PAPERS
CongressCATH 2002: Translating Class, Altering Hospitality

http://www.leeds.ac.uk/cath/congress/2002/

AHRB CentreCATH
University of Leeds, UK
June 21st - 23rd 2002

Our first conference addresses a crisis created by the continuing
fractures of sociality expressed either as internal estrangement or as
hostility to those perceived as the resident stranger. This first annual
Congress of the newly instituted AHRB Centre for Cultural Analysis,
Theory and History aims to incite new debates around the interrelated
aspects of both the political and philosophical theories of class and
hospitality and their current translations to cultural practices,
analyses and performance.

Class is lived in/as acts of translation both violent and reparative. We
want to explore in new ways how class is thought, assumed, known; how
class assumes, thinks, knows. In reconfigured social and cultural worlds
fissured by cultural and sexual difference and by global relocations of
economic and politic refugees, to what has class been translated; how
does it translate such movements and relocations? Hospitality, an
ethical and unconditional responsibility towards the uninvited other,
has entered current debates both through concrete issues of democracy
and citizenship created by real movements of peoples and social
translations, and through recent philosophical reflections. Translation
serves as metaphor for both transposition and encounter. Alteration
involves both change and the mediation of otherness. Is one contingency
of disciplinary, academic intellectual activity the erasure of class, a
self-erasure, a re-invention? If class as a structure of feeling
functions as a mode of internal estrangement and differencing, how can
we rethink difference on/in the terrain of social hostility or of
hospitality to another, marked as external, who poses the question of,
and an interrogation from, the place of the stranger? The conference
will explore issues of conceptualisation and classification, the
economies of hospitality and estrangement, migration and transformation,
ethics and alterity, participation and realignment.

The conference aims to enliven a transdisciplinary space, projecting
debate between intellectual divisions, between disciplines and modes of
analysis from art to philosophy, from Jewish Studies, Cultural Studies,
Postcolonial Studies to architecture and film, from feminist theory to
post-modern philosophy.

We invite abstracts of not more than 200 words for papers to be
submitted by 15 December 2001.

Keynote Speaker: Gayatri Spivak (Columbia University)

Plenary Speakers: Paul Gilroy (Yale University), Tahar Ben Jelloun,
Cora Kaplan (university of Southampton), Abdelkébir Khatibi
(University Mohammed v-souissi), Martha Rosler (Mason Gross
School of the Arts, Rutgers University).

Special Panel Speakers: Rachel Bowlby (University of York), Assia
Djebar ( Louisiana State University), Aritha van Herk (University of
Calgary), Saskia Sassen (London School of Economics/University
of Chicago), Carolyn Steedman (University of Warwick).

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p.j.nixleeds.ac.uk AHRB CentreCATH,

School of Fine Art, History of Art & Cultural Studies, Old Mining
Building, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, UK.
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/cath/ http://www.leeds.ac.uk/fine_art/
Voice: 0113 233 2580 Fax: 0113 233 1628

Quellennachweis:
CFP: Translating Class, Altering Hospitality (UK) (12/15/01;6/21/02-6/23/02). In: ArtHist.net, 12.10.2001. Letzter Zugriff 23.04.2024. <https://arthist.net/archive/24680>.

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