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Call for Papers

Theme: Borders and Boundaries
Type: 2023 IARPT Conference
Institution: Institute for American Religious and Philosophical
Thought (IARPT)
   Catholic Academy of Berlin
Location: Berlin (Germany)
Date: 12.–15.6.2023
Deadline: 15.2.2023

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The Institute for American Religious and Philosophical Thought
(IARPT) is pleased to announce its 2023 international meeting, which
will be held at the Katholische Akademie in Berlin on June 12-15
2023. The theme of the meeting is borders and boundaries. Keynote and
plenary speakers include Sigurd Bergmann, Anne-Laure Amilhat Szary,
Terrence Deacon, John Thatamanil, Robert Yelle, Marcia Pally, Matthew
Bagger, and Randall Auxier.  

As sites of power manifested, borders and boundaries characterize
some of the prevailing developments of our time, encompassing
families separated, hope and hopelessness, and the limits of civil
and political order. Christian Parenti has written that “the border
becomes a text from which to read the future — or a version of it”
(2011). This conference theme finds inspiration in Parenti’s
metaphor, both by recognizing a radical openness to the present
situation and insisting on the capacity of theology, philosophy,
ethics, and other associated disciplines to rewrite better outcomes
and mitigate those that are catastrophic.

This conference program invites an interdisciplinary and integrative
look at these dynamics. In the fluidity of the contemporary global
order, attending to relationships among forms of bordering offers
lessons on how to reimagine borders and boundaries more justly and
with greater sensitivity to both ecological systems and human
communities, religious or otherwise. Particularly welcome are
proposals for papers that explore political, religious, ecological,
or analytical borders, which can be defined as follows and linked to
some (non-exhaustive) potential paper topics:

- Religious borders/boundaries can be defined as points at which the
contrasts between religious traditions become explicit and
self-conscious to the members of the cultures in question or to third
parties, giving rise to narratives that reinforce said contrasts.
Possible paper topics include: approaches to interreligious dialogue,
the theological “spatial turn,” the limits of the
secular/post-secular, political theologies regarding land and
territory, or peace/violence in interreligious terms.

- Political borders/boundaries can be defined as demarcations between
neighboring sovereign territories, in which sovereignty is typically
understood according to the (contested) norms of the Westphalian
system, i.e., as mutually recognized, mutually excluded, and
uniformly distributed within each territory in question. Possible
paper topics include: the proliferation of walls, changing patterns
of sovereignty, cartographic practices, and postcolonial dynamics, as
well as various theoretical perspectives.

- Ecological borders/boundaries can be defined as thresholds
concerning human interaction with more-than-human biological and
climatic systems, challenging as well as reinforcing such terms as
“nature” and “culture” and traversing the limits of the human.
Possible paper topics include: the Anthropocene, planetary boundaries
ecology, biosemiotics, or ecotheologies.

- Analytical borders/boundaries can be defined either as distinctions
between analytical approaches, i.e., academic disciplines, or as
distinctions which are themselves of a predominantly analytical
character, i.e., logical or metaphysical distinctions. Possible paper
topics include: approaches to interdisciplinarity, paradox,
continuity/discontinuity, spatial or temporal boundaries considered
as such, or theories of entanglement.

By examining and layering these forms of bordering in succession, the
program for the conference represents a structure by which the
various types of borders can be analyzed and compared. To do so is to
invite inquiries into the dynamics of interreligious interaction,
territorial sovereignty, and the human relationship with nonhuman
nature within planetary systems. Any paper that speaks to some aspect
of the above question is welcome, but we particularly welcome papers
that engage with one or more of the core traditions of IARPT:
pragmatism, process thought, naturalism/empiricism, and liberal
theology. Moreover, as always, we will consider proposals that do not
address the conference theme but are related to the intellectual
traditions that are of special interest to IARPT.

Proposals should contain a descriptive title and a brief (no more
than 500 words) but informative and readable description of the paper
to be presented. Proposals should also include a brief (150-word)
biographical sketch of their authors. Proposals should envision paper
readings of approximately twenty minutes followed by moderated
questions from the audience. All proposals should be sent in Word/PDF
format to the program chairs Gary Slater and Lisa Landoe Hedrick:
garysla...@uni-muenster.de  –  lan...@uchicago.edu

The deadline for submissions is February 15, 2023.

Potential funding for travel and lodging is available in the form of
the W. Creighton Peden Scholarship; please click here for more
information, and please indicate your interest in this option upon
the submission of your proposal. Responses to paper proposals can be
expected by March 15, 2023.


Conference website:
https://www.iarpt.org/?page_id=525






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