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Call for Papers

Theme: Paul Ricoeur
Subtitle: Thinker of the Margins?
Type: International Conference
Institution: University of Antwerp
   VU-University Amsterdam
Location: Antwerp
Date: 18.–20.9.2014
Deadline: 15.2.2014

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Ricoeur can be called the philosopher of all dialogues. He engaged
virtually all the great movements of thought, entered into debate
with scientists, and voices his concerns in the public debate. He
never sought to engage in polemics but tried to engage seemingly
unbridgeable positions or thinkers in a fruitful dialogue. Ricoeur
was not a radical thinker in search of extremes, but rather committed
to mediate between conflicting philosophers and streams of thought,
therein lies part of his originality and creativity. Where others
sees dichotomy, he sees dialectic. In this regard one cannot but note
how often Ricoeur uses the word between (entre) in the titles of his
articles, always in search of connections, confrontations, and
unexpected syntheses between thinkers who have preceded him. He
really is a thinker of the between.

But does Ricoeur's 'dialogical approach' not result in a
harmonization of often diverging positions? Is Ricoeur able to hear
the radicalness of certain insights? Is it possible that his
hermeneutical philosophy takes away the sharpness of certain problems
in current religious, political and philosophical debates? Might it
even be the case that he did not hear certain voices, precisely
because they resist synthesis? This conference inquires what happens
to Ricoeur's hermeneutical approach if we confront it with its limits.

The conference will address topical philosophical, socio-political
and religious issues, from a Ricoeurian perspective, but in
conversation with other, more 'radical' thinkers.

Submissions

The organizing committee welcomes submissions that address any
aspects of Ricoeur's work. Nevertheless, we especially invite
proposals on the conference's theme Ricoeur: Thinker of the Margins.
Possible topics include:

- Justice and the Struggle for Recognition:
Justice is an important concept in Ricoeur's work, first of all, as
an ethical concept. For Ricoeur, justice is a way of establishing
peace, both in concrete relations to others, as on the level of
institutions. In The Course of Recognition, Ricoeur however shifts
the focus on political philosophy, and, in so doing he creates a
tension in his understanding of justice. On the one hand, he agrees
with Hegel and Honneth that justice is a justification for violence
that is part of "the struggle for recognition". On the other hand,
Ricoeur also points again to the role of justice for peace. As he
argues with Marcel Hénaff, in the exchange of gifts for instance, the
parties involved proof their recognition to one another, and, in this
sense, they maintain a peaceful relationship. This session aims at
investigating the tension between justice and recognition in
Ricoeur's work, and especially in The Course of Recognition.

- Ricoeur, the Religious Other and Interreligious Dialogue:
In the vast collection of his writings Ricoeur only sporadically
raised the issue of interreligious dialogue. Though Ricoeur was
sensitive to issues of religious diversity, interreligious violence
and the encounter between religions, he did not engage into a
systematic debate on these issues. However Ricoeur's hermeneutical
philosophy may offer a framework enabling a thorough reflection on the
challenges presented by the encounter between religions.

- Discourse, Normativity and Power:
The reason that Ricoeur's thinking is not often mentioned in the
context of feminist, queer and race theory is perhaps his
consideration of discourse as a "laboratory of thought experiments",
instead of as excluding and normative. On the other hand, his
hermeneutics of suspicion, notions of critique and distanciation, and
his ideas about the narrative and ethical self do seem interesting
for thinking about alterity and difference. For this session, we
invite papers that reflect upon Ricoeur's notion of discourse, and
address the question of normativity and power.

- Literature, Identity, Politics:
Literary fiction plays an important role in Ricoeur's hermeneutics of
subjectivity, especially with regard to his concept of narrative
identity, which enables him to synthesize different aspects of
personal identity. Ricoeur is less explicit about the relation
between literary fiction and politics. This relation entails,
however, vital issues, like for instance the role of fiction in the
constitution of a political entity, the (legitimizing, critical or
anarchic) function of narratives in political discourse, the power
dependency (and transformation) of the narrative imagination, the
possibility of politic pluralism, etc. In this session, we intend to
critically examine the contribution of Ricoeur's hermeneutics to
these issues.

Please submit an abstract of approximately roughly 300-500 words
(including the paper's title, the author's name, institutional
affiliation, mailing address, and email address. Times New Roman
typeface size 12, interspaced 1.5, justified paragraphs). Abstracts
and papers may be in English or in French. There will be parallel
sessions giving each speaker about 20 min to present and 15 minutes
for discussion.

Deadline for submission is February 15th, 2014. Notification of
acceptance will be given before the 15th of April, 2014.

Please mail to: geoffrey.dierckxs...@uantwerpen.be


Contact:

Geoffrey Dierckxsens
Departement Wijsbegeerte
Universiteit Antwerpen
Stadscampus, S.D.412
Grote Kauwenberg 18
BE-2000 Antwerpen
Belgium
Email: geoffrey.dierckxs...@uantwerpen.be




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