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Call for Papers

"Democracy in Our Time: The Past and Future of the
Enlightenment"
11th International Conference
Forum on Contemporary Theory
Department of English, Banaras Hindu University
Varanasi (India)
18-21 December 2008

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The eleventh International Conference of the Forum on
Contemporary Theory will be held in Varanasi from the 18th
to 21st December, 2008 in collaboration with the Department
of English, Banaras Hindu University.

To some extent, the hope is to take stock of our
understanding of democracy as it has been theorized in the
last many decades, but the larger aspiration of this
conference is to go from there to address the subject of
democracy from a number of angles that tend not to surface
in any conspicuous way in routine discussions of the
subject.

On the face of it, there is some reason to be skeptical
about whether standard liberal democratic theory in the
orthodox tradition of the Enlightenment has the resources to
cope with the remarkable developments in politics and
culture since the rise of identity politics, the pervasive
and persistent impress of religion in politics, the
unrestrained and unilateral actions of the only superpower
remaining in the world, the manifestly undemocratic
tendencies within polities around the world, and the rampant
and rapacious sway of finance capital and corporate impunity
which brooks no constraint upon itself. Liberal democratic
doctrine has been salutary in stressing human rights and
freedoms and democratic procedures but to a considerable
extent these are formal rather than substantive claims and
the question to investigate is the extent to which its
theories have the conceptual ingredients to make these
claims more substantive.

This conference seeks to diagnose these limitations and
think towards deeper and more philosophical answers to the
questions that liberal theory has hitherto addressed merely
on the surface. We would like to ask what forms of
disenchantment ordinary people have experienced, perhaps
even from as long ago as the late seventeenth century when
conceptions of nature and matter began to be conceived in
terms that made a society geared to profit and private gain
the central goals of human flourishing. How does such a
diagnosis explain some of the rise of identity politics and
the deeply felt conservative religiosity of recent times in
many parts of the world? How and why does the liberal and
progressive contempt towards such a politics and religiosity
betray an undemocratic attitude? How can we find secular
forms of enchantment for our own times and in doing so
develop traditions of the more radical elements of the
Enlightenment which were very early on thwarted by liberal
orthodoxies?

How does that tradition of the radical Enlightenment grow
historically out of remarkable antecedents in social thought
and literature and philosophy ranging from the unorthodox
philosophical and political ideas of seventeenth century
radical sects as well as scientific dissenters in England,
to Spinoza, to the Romanticism of Blake and Shelley and some
of the German Idealists and work its way through one strand
in the so-called early Marx (though we believe this was a
strand in all of Marx’s writing and the distinction between
early and late Marx is an invention of Althusser’s) as well
as the various anarchist philosophies of Bakunin and others
right down to the critical theories of the Frankfurt school
and the libertarian humanism of a figure like Chomsky; and
even more important for our seminar, what affinities does it
have with bhakti and sufi traditions in India and, as has
been suggested in some recent writing, what affinities does
this tradition in the West going back to the seventeenth
century radical sectaries in England have to the local forms
of a rooted radical philosophical politics and political
morality in Gandhi?

Quite apart from this intellectual history of the subject,
one specific issue that we would like to fasten on in the
context of this critical scrutiny and effort at expansion of
Enlightenment ideas is this: liberal theory has functioned
within a framework of the orthodox Enlightenment in which
the values of liberty (autonomy) and equality find
themselves in a tension that seems to have no end. That
framework does not obviously seem to have the conceptual
resources to bring the tension to any satisfying resolution.
So, one large intellectual effort on the part of the
conference will therefore be to try and identify the
philosophical resources to say that there is no way to
understand the value of equality without seeing it as
essential to autonomy itself, that is to say essential to
self-realization and therefore to an unalienated life, a
life without the disenchantment we have lived with in our
social lives for so long. Without these philosophical
resources, for example, Isaiah Berlin’s anxieties about the
notion of ‘positive liberty’ seem both natural and justified
leaving no plausible notion of liberty or freedom that is
not negative, formal or procedural. But our question is:
might we rethink the frameworks of the orthodox
enlightenment’s thinking about liberty towards a more
substantial notion of democracy in which such anxieties as
Berlin’s do not emerge as natural and compulsory.

The conference should like to first formulate some of these
large questions briefly raised in this short proposal in
more detail and with more break down, and then make a
preliminary honorable stab at answering them in some detail.
We will proceed both historically and analytically towards
these intellectual goals, inviting philosophers, historians,
literary scholars and social scientists with broad interests
in situating political themes in the theory of value, mind,
and culture.

We should have a session each on:
a) Philosophical Aspects of Democracy
b) The Intellectual History of Democracy in the West and in
   India
c) Democracy and Culture: Indian Traditions (includes
   specialists from literature, music, the visual arts, and
   cinema)
d) Democracy and Culture (Western Traditions)
e) The Political Sociology of Democracy
f) Religion, Secularism, and Democracy
g) Democracy and Identity Politics

Submission Deadline

500-word abstract or proposal is due by August 1, 2008. It
should be mailed as an email attachment to Professor Akeel
Bilgrami, the Convener of the Conference. Complete papers
should be limited to 12 pages (approximately 20 minutes of
reading time). A longer version may be submitted for
possible publication in the Journal of Contemporary Thought
or in the conference volume brought out by the Forum. The
completed paper should reach the Convener of the Conference
by October 30, 2008.

Conference Volume

Select papers from the conference and from those submitted
in response to the “Call for Papers” will be included in the
conference volume, which will be ready for formal release at
the 2009 conference of the Forum. Completed papers should
reach us as email attachments by the end of June 2009.
 

Contact:

Prafulla C. Kar, Director
Centre for Contemporary Theory
301-302, Shivshakti Complex
84, Sampatrao Colony
RC Dutt Road
Baroda 390007
India
Tel: +91 (0)265 6622512 or 2338067
Email: p...@satyam.net.in
Web: http://www.fctworld.org

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