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Call for Papers

Theme: Nomad Properties
Subtitle: Political Anthropologies of Nomadism from the 18th Century
until Today
Type: Workshop
Institution: University of Erfurt
Location: Erfurt (Germany)
Date: 30.6.–2.7.2022
Deadline: 15.1.2022

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In the ancient narrative of the emergence of civilization, nomadism
serves as a negative mirror of agricultural sedentariness. The
juxtaposition of the farmer and the nomad can already be found in the
bible. Genesis 3.19 reads: “By the sweat of your brow you will eat
your food until you return to the ground, since from it you were
taken; for dust you are and to dust you will.” And the praise of
self-disciplined, hard physical field work is not exclusive to
Christianity. Shennong, the Farmer God of ancient China, who first
formed a plough from wood and told the black-haired people how to use
it, is just one example.

The political anthropology of the nomad holds that unlike the farmer,
who lives a well-ordered, disciplined life, the nomad is not tied to
land and thus mobile, unsteady, improvident, and not in control of
his or her appetites. The farmer follows a cycle of self-discipline,
cultivates the land, makes it prosper, and thus furthers civilization
– whilst the nomad just consumes the fruits of the earth without
investing any labor into it. This narrative is specifically powerful
in the 18th and 19th centuries. For example, Herder speaks of man as
a deficient being whose universalistic inadaptation bears the
properties of the nomad. The nomad thus must be civilized by second
nature. In this sense, the nomad remains the “primitive” until the
late 20th century, whether as a subject from the colonies, a member
of the lower classes, or as a migrant – a view that only recently has
been called into question (e.g. James C. Scott).

Beyond this narrative, however, a cultural discourse emerged that
offered an alternate, positive understanding of the nomad. In the
critique of science and capitalism of the 1960s and 1970s, “nomadic
thinking” (Deleuze/Guattari) became a positive example for opposing
political, economic and scientific hegemonies. Yet against the
background of a neoliberal, (post-)industrial growth society, which
has privatized all fields of nature and society, the nonconformism
and flexibility of thought and action called for in this postmodern
framework has been appropriated as a virtue of a simultaneously
precarious and privileged global nomadism (migrant workers vs.
managers). Today, nomadism appears to be a contemporary form of life
that characterizes a growing number of people (cf. Rosi Braidotti).
These people can be poor or rich, they might themselves identify as
nomads, or they might prefer not to. From travelling day laborers to
refugees of war, to scientists, to a global managerial class, nomadic
forms of life seem to be on the rise again. They can be voluntary or
forced, temporal or permanent. And yet with the call for new forms of
subsistence economy, the negative connotation of the anthropological
figure of the nomad is beginning to reappear, although
nomadic/migrant thinking remains a point of reference for
emancipatory theory formation.

At our workshop, we want to relate historical instances of nomadism
to the role of “the nomad” in political discourses and recent
theoretical debates. We want to ask about nomadic habits and nomad
properties and their relation to property structures: (How) is the
trajectory of the political anthropology of the nomad related to the
structural change of property? We are interested in discussing these
questions not only with historians and sociologists but with the
visual and liberal arts and other forms of referencing the nomadic as
well. We especially invite proposals which take on historical and
contemporary empirical societal developments from a theorized
perspective on nomadism.

The workshop is organized by the Erfurt-based research project
“Property and Habits” which is part of the DFG-Collaborative Research
Centre “Structural Change of Property”. The workshop is planned as an
in-person workshop taking place in Erfurt from Thursday, June 30, to
Saturday, July 2, 2022.

Proposals for presentations should be sent, by January 15th 2022, to:
anna.moell...@uni-erfurt.de or dirk.sch...@uni-erfurt.de

They should have a length of approx. 200—300 words. We strongly invite
contributions by women or minority groups within the research field.

Research Project “Property and Habits”:
https://sfb294-eigentum.de/en/subprojects/besitz-und-gewohnheit/

DFG-Special-Research-Field “Structural Changes of Property”:
https://sfb294-eigentum.de/en/




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