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Challenging Cultures of Death: Call for Papers
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miscellaneous |
press release
Wednesday August 08, 2007 14:15 by Deirdre Clancy - Institute for Feminism and Religion
Final Call for Contributions
This important conference provides activists of all hues with a chance to reflect on the sources of violence in our culture. It aims to combine contributions from exciting and innovative theorists with the lived experience of grassroots resisters.
Periods of reflection and sharing of experience and theory are often underestimated as a source of strength and wisdom, particularly in anti-war activism. I would therefore urge anyone who feels they have something to say about resistance to mainstream cultural imperatives that ask us to tolerate violence to think about contributing to this conference. If you do not feel able to do so, please think about attending and participating more informally. The information is below.
The Institute for Feminism and Religion is a not-for-profit organisation. This is a non-commercial event; the conference fee is purely to cover the costs of running it. This is the final call for papers for this event.
Challenging Cultures of Death
Call for Papers: Final Deadline: August 31st 2007
The Center for Gender and Women's Studies, Trinity College Dublin, and the Institute for Feminism and Religion invite proposals for contributions to our forthcoming event:
Challenging Cultures of Death: A cross-cultural dialogue imagining a political and symbolic world based on life not death: mercy not sacrifice.
Keynote Speakers
Bracha L. Ettinger
Griselda Pollock
Anne Primavesi
Peggy Reeves Sanday
Genevieve Vaughan
Multi-disciplinary: Papers invited under the headings - Theory, Resistance, Theology.
Venue: Trinity College Dublin
Date: Fri 2nd Sat 3rd Sun 4th Nov 2007.
For more information, please visit:
http://www.tcd.ie/Womens_Studies/events/cultures_of_dea...s.php
http://www.instituteforfeminismandreligion.org
Call for Papers
Priority will be given to those taking a multi-disciplinary synchronic perspective, and taking imaginative approaches to presenting that maximize pre-event preparation (making papers available in advance) and interactive modes of engagement with participants. We also hope to balance incisive critique with concrete strategies for practical action.
THEORY
Given the violent history of the 20th century, the threats facing humanity and the Earth, and the resurgence of violent religious fundamentalisms in the 21st century, Enlightenment optimism toward the social order has now largely collapsed. Post-modernist thinkers variously interrogate the libidinal economy (Lyotard), the sacrificial social contract (Kristeva), biopolitics (Nietzsche, Foucault, Agamben), the culture of the death drives (Lacan, Irigaray), and the violence of mourning (Klein, Fornari, Butler).
Invited proposals
Proposals invited from any of the above perspectives that address the
question: Challenging cultures of death: mercy not sacrifice.
That investigate the potential of the Matrixial Sphere (Bracha Ettinger).
RESISTANCE
In the most despotic regimes, isolated individuals (Bonhoeffer, Weil, Berrigans, Day, Gandhi, Mandela, Starhawk, Aung San Suu Kyi), as well as many conscientious objectors, have resisted cultural imperatives. What enables them to resist?
Invited Proposals
That investigate resistance from the perspective of group psychology
(political or psychoanalytic)
That investigate disciplinary or spiritual practices that enable resistance
That investigate the effects of parenting and violence Theology
THEOLOGY
The main Abrahamic faiths often represent their founding acts through narratives of sacrifice. How does this relate to the cultural valorisation of death in combat, or martyrdom?
Invited Proposals
That interrogate feminist, womanist and post-colonial approaches to the political implications of sacrificial theories and theologies
That investigate current critiques of sacrifice (Girard, Irigaray, Kristeva, Maccoby, Koenigsberg)
Directions: Participants wishing to present a 10-minute contributed paper are invited to submit online a 200 to 300 words abstract for consideration by the conference committees. Abstracts should be sent by August 31st. All those submitting proposals will be informed of the conference committee's decisions by September 30th 2007 (at the latest). Online submission form http://www.tcd.ie/Womens_Studies/events/cultures_of_dea...n.php
Who Should Attend?
We hope to attract feminist theorists and activists committed to cultural critique. Contributors should aim to make their work accessible to a wide variety of participants at the event and, where appropriate, in potentially publishable form later.
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Jump To Comment: 1 2 3Below is an article in today's Irish Times by the co-ordinator of the conference, Dr. Mary Condren. It is in the Rite and Reason column.
As some plot Armageddon, what gods do we worship?
Author: Mary Condren Th.D
On the very same day that the U.S. Government announced it was to supply 20 billion dollars worth of advanced weaponry to Saudi Arabia , and 30 billion to Israel, a friend sent a small Internet video.
Taken by Max Blumenthal (Jewish), the video reported on a July Washington conference organised by Christians United for Israel. Delegates comprised several former and current US senators: Joseph Lieberman, Tom DeLay, and Rich Santorum. Presidential candidate, John McCain, paid a surprise visit.
Delegates were asked about the Second Coming. DeLay announced that he was looking forward to it: others pitied those who would be left behind in the Rapture. Since the Second Coming was presumably going to happen in Israel, it was imperative that good relations with Israel be maintained. For these reasons, CUFI lobby Congress to oppose a two state solution between Israel and Palestine and encourage a pre-emptive strike on Iran.
Calmly envisaging the destruction of a country with 70 million people, they argued that if we don't take out Iran, or if we move out of Iraq, Muslims (who have Satan behind them) will take over and follow us here.
They looked forward to Armageddon. Some had their bags packed: others wore tee shirts comparing lesbians, gays, and bisexuals to animals, and waited for the earth to be cleansed.
A problem arose. The Anti-Christ. What would such a person look like? Some delegates announced gravely that the Anti-Christ would be a Peacemaker: one who had promoted peace for many years and who would force Israel into a peace treaty with the Arabs.
Delay Armageddon and you delay the Rapture, forcing conference delegates back to the harsh realities of the daily grind from which their omnipotent fantasies had protected them.
Had a mere human being expressed such fantasies, any junior psychiatrist would have instigated appropriate medical procedures. Any police officer would have prosecuted such hate speech on the spot. Expressed under the auspices of religion, however, such views receive immunity.
We are not dealing with religious beliefs, but omnipotent fantasies of Empire backed by the most devastating weapons known to humankind. When paranoid delusions are backed up with 50 billion dollars of weapons we need to question freedom of speech, and ask the questions: whose speech, whose trade, whose victims?
Studies are now emerging about the lethal role such fantasies played in the run up to the Iraqi invasion. The presence of distinguished current and former members of the US legislature at that conference speaks volumes about the ongoing ability of such fantasies to inform decision making at the highest levels.
What does this have to do with Ireland? Robert Fisk's magnificent work, The Great War for Civilization, outlines the despair of Iraqi doctors in the face of their attempts to treat cancer patients, victims of the uranium tipped weapons showered on their homes, and the half a million children who died through sanctions against Iraq. He patiently traces back the origins of some of the weapons used to decimate villages, shatter families, cripple or blind little children, back to their manufacturers: the manicured lawns of the U.S., Britain, Germany, France, Switzerland (and now Ireland) concealed behind their manicured receptionists' desks.
In the face of Fisk's incontrovertible evidence of the carnage wreaked on innocent children, manufacturers argued: No, we do not make weapons here. Only computer parts. We are not responsible for their uses. Well quite. They leave that to the propaganda generating machinery of religious and political fundamentalisms, passively supported by other's silences, and legally supported by dubious notions of free speech.
In contrast, the current Irish Government's Three Monkeys (freedom not to hear, see, or speak of evil) approach to the ethics of weapon's parts manufacturing in Ireland, and the use of Shannon Airport facilitates a build up to what is potentially one of the greatest threats to the future of humankind.
Religious fundamentalisms, political fundamentalisms - each achieve their identities sacrificially, that is to say, at someone else's expense.
In the past, influenced by missionary envoys, Ireland often led the world on international policy. Today, the challenge is much greater; the stakes much higher; the consequences, immeasurable.
Asked about the deaths of at least 500,000 Iraqi children through UN sanctions, Madeleine Albright commented that it was worth it. Her comment still evokes a sense of horror.
But in Ireland, we must ask questions of our own fundamentalisms. What gods do we now worship? What fantasies sustain our well being? At whose expense do we remain silent?
What price might we be willing to pay in the cause of pre-emptive peace? And lastly: is our present policy worth it?
8min video
http://matthewyglesias.theatlantic.com/archives/2007/07...l.php
Mary Condren Th.D. is co-ordinator of the forthcoming conference: Challenging Cultures of Death: Mercy Not Sacrifice. http://www.instituteforfeminismandreligion.org
link no longer works. would like to see this video.
Any chance someone could post a working link? Thanks!
http://84.media.vimeo.com/d1/5/39/31/vimeo.251385.3a120...f.flv
the original link is working again but for those who want a local copy of the video, this link might be more convenient