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Call for Papers

Theme: Inverting Globalisation
Type: International Conference
Institution: Amsterdam Centre for Globalisation Studies
(ACGS), University of Amsterdam
Location: Amsterdam (Netherlands)
Date: 9.–10.10.2014
Deadline: 1.4.2014

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Whereas David Harvey has famously interpreted globalisation as a
process of time/space compression, multiple trends proliferating
globally suggest that its functional effects include the rooted, the
local and the slow. The Amsterdam Centre for Globalisation Studies
(ACGS) has developed four research clusters around the themes of
mobility, sustainability, aesthetics and connectivity. This
conference probes the flip side of these themes, engaging with those
aspects of globalisation that too often remain in the shadows or are
seen as antithetical to it. We want to analyse the tensions and
interactions between mobility and immobility, between sustainability
and precarity, between glossy and dirty aesthetics, and between
connection and disconnection – not to arrive at yet another set of
binaries, but to show how these inverse processes are also intrinsic
to globalisation. Taking them into account will make possible a
fuller understanding of the uneven, often unexpected and not always
obvious ways in which globalisation impacts the contemporary world.

Keynote speakers:

- Fatma Müge Göcek (Professor of Sociology and Women's Studies,
  University of Michigan, US)
- Oliver Marchart (Professor of Sociology, Düsseldorf Art Academy,
  Germany)
- Ellen Rutten (Professor of Slavonic Literature and Culture,
  University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands)
- Ulises Mejias (Associate Professor of Communication Studies, State
  University of New York College at Oswego, US)

The conference will comprise four sessions:

- Session I: Immobility and the Rearticulation of Identities:

Besides globalisation’s well-covered tendency towards a general
condition of mobility, pervasive instances of immobility can be
found. Factory workers whose cheap labour is indispensable for global
trade, but who remain confined to their immediate surroundings
constitute one tangible example. In addition, there are more
intangible instances of immobility, such as the worldwide
(re-)assertion of national and religious identities claimed to be
timeless and sacrosanct. Are these rearticulated and reasserted
identities merely instances of false consciousness? Is there a
relation between ever more fluid processes of cultural production and
exchange, and the attempts to block this mobility in the name of
invented or imagined culture or tradition? Or are newly aggressive
forms of identity politics part and parcel of contemporary globalised
governmentality?

- Session II: Unsustainability, Precarity, Ecology:

The inverse of the sustainable is the unsustainable, evoking a sense
of the unbearable or intolerable, a moment of crisis.
Unsustainability can be attributed to global economic growth, energy
needs, food provision, or to particular political structures or ways
of life. It can be used in service of many goals, from the
revolutionary to the conservative. This session asks how
unsustainability can be understood (epistemologically, politically,
affectively) and explores its relation to precarity, another term
that inverts the emphasis on survival implicit in sustainability, and
to ecology, which no longer applies exclusively to environmental
matters but is increasingly linked to the (geo)political.

- Session III: Dirty Aesthetics:

Processes of globalisation inspire a dialogue but also tensions
between different conceptualisations of the aesthetic. One such
tension emerges in the quest for the authentic and/or local through
the rough and the dirty. Folk singers aspire to authenticity by
refusing technologies of amplification, fashion designers use
untreated materials, and urban fringes are turned into creative
districts. These proliferating “dirty aesthetics” validate local
modes of production that are frequently coupled to artisanal
craftsmanship. Can an aesthetics of roughness and imperfection claim
to be resistant to the glossy surfaces of globalisation? Or will the
margins be consumed as yet another resource for the integrating
genius of a capitalist world market?

- Session IV: Dis- and Misconnection:

This session critically examines the claim of unlimited many-to-many
communication through social media platforms by exploring the role of
dis- and misconnection. It focuses on three sets of actors that
facilitate and broker, but also obstruct and complicate, online
connectivity. First, users of the Web divide into linguistic spheres
and particular networks. Second, corporations zealously protect
online platforms by walling off users and their data, blackboxing
their technological architectures, and algorithmically steering and
organising user interaction. Finally, states become increasingly
sophisticated in controlling and “nationalising” online communication
through surveillance and filtering, as well as through propaganda and
cyber-attacks.

Panel Proposals

Proposals for group panels should include the following information
for the review process.

1. An 800-word summary of the overall panel proposal which contains
   the following:
   - Title of the panel
   - Preference for one of the above-mentioned sessions
   - Objectives and main questions to be addressed in the panel
   - Main perspectives and/or theoretical/conceptual frameworks
   - Description of how the session will be structured
2. A 400-word abstract of each individual paper/presentation
3. A list of the panel members including their institutional
   affiliations and contact information

Standalone Papers:
Individuals submitting paper proposals should provide an abstract of
400 words including a title and a 100-word (max) bio-bibliography,
plus indication of preference for one of the above-mentioned sessions.

Please send proposals in Word format before April 1 to Amani Maihoub:
a.maih...@uva.nl

Organised by the Amsterdam Centre for Globalisation Studies (ACGS):
http://www.acgs.uva.nl

Organising Committee:

Robin Celikates
Johan F. Hartle
Jeroen de Kloet
Michiel Leezenberg
Esther Peeren
Thomas Poell
Marijke de Valck

See also the conference webpage:
http://acgs.uva.nl/news-and-events/upcoming-events/item/inverting-globalisation.html


Contact:

Robin Celikates
Department of Philosophy
University of Amsterdam
Oude Turfmarkt 145
NL-1012 GC  Amsterdam
Netherlands
Email: r.celika...@uva.nl
Web:
http://acgs.uva.nl/news-and-events/upcoming-events/item/inverting-globalisation.html




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