__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: The Other in Chinese History and Thought
Subtitle: Territory, Race, Culture, Philosophy, Religion
Type: International Workshop
Institution: Ghent University
Location: Ghent (Belgium)
Date: 8.–9.2.2021
Deadline: 15.5.2020

__________________________________________________


The figure of the “other” (or “Other”) looms large in contemporary
philosophy as well as across a broad range of disciplines in the
humanities and social sciences. In very general terms,
poststructuralist and postcolonial approaches have arguably been
quite successful in arguing that social, cultural, and national
identity is always shaped by specific relations of power and cannot
be approached as an unproblematic or self-evident given. Even on a
discursive level, “self” and “other” are now usually seen as
fundamentally relational terms, the particular content of which has
to be understood in the context of historically determinate
circumstances and conditions. As such, the “other” is not simply a
blanket designation for the opposite side of a supposedly pregiven
and self-transparent territory of sameness. On the contrary,
conceptions of otherness are always already involved in the
constitution of particular forms of identity.

To give a more specific example, within the field of Chinese
philosophy, it has become almost commonplace to assert that
traditional forms of thought such as Confucianism (which is often
used as a stand-in for “Chinese culture” as such) departed from a
relational view of personal identity (think of Henry Rosemont and
Roger Ames’s Confucian “role ethics”). Within this line of reasoning,
the “self” does not pre-exist its relations with the other, more
precisely with those particular others (family members, friends,
teachers, colleagues, …) it calls its own. At the same time, the
question as to exactly who counts as what Jonathan Z. Smith has
called the “proximate other” (as opposed to the wholly other, or the
other in general) in the context of Chinese (intellectual) history
has thus far received considerably less attention. As is well known
however, the other of and in Chinese history was not simply a
nondescript conceptual counterpart to an equally abstract notion of
the subject or self, but rather was often located on the other side
of Chinese civilization (huaxia 華夏) or even of humanity as such.
China as “All-under-Heaven” (tianxia 天下) could only claim an
all-inclusive position by, in one way or another, engaging with its
others and with what lies beyond the “nine regions” (jiuzhou 九州),
even if by way of exclusion.

When we think of the “Other” of China, a long and diverse list such
as the following could come to mind: “barbarian”, Xiongnu, Khitan,
Jurchen, Mongol, Manchu, Christian, Westerner, Japanese, Taiwanese,
Tibetan, Uyghur, non-Han, Muslim, migrant worker, Hong
Kongese…Distinguishing between what and who qualifies as Chinese and
non-Chinese involved and still involves very real and tangible
practices of distinction, exclusion, and othering and thus continues
to be closely related to complex questions of territorial, racial,
religious, cultural, political, and religious identity in present-day
China. If we follow the famous historian Ge Zhaoguang 葛兆光in posing
the question “What is China?”, it is obvious that if we always have
to ask, as Ge himself does, “What isn’t China/Chinese?” at the same
time. The goal of this workshop is to bring together scholars working
in the field of (intellectual) history, philosophy and religion to
reflect on the topic of otherness in Chinese history and thought from
within their own area of expertise. The convenors welcome
contributions with an empirical focus as well as more conceptually
oriented discussions related to the theme of the workshop. Possible
topics for discussion include, but are not limited to, the following:
how did the Chinese empire/state conceive of and deal with specific
groups of “non-Chinese” others during certain periods in history? Was
otherness conceived of primarily in spatial, temporal,
civilizational, or other terms? How were representations of otherness
discursively legitimized and actualized in practices of
categorization and governance? What sort of relations can we discern
between religious, ethnic, and cultural identity in the Chinese
context? Do terms and concepts such as “empire”, “racism”,
“colonialism”, or even “culture” and “alterity”, help us gain a
better understanding of specific instances of otherness in Chinese
(intellectual) history, or are they complicit in perpetuating a
Eurocentric understanding of the non-West? And last but not 3 least,
all of the above questions always require us to consider who the “we”
is that is asking them. Practical information Abstract submission:
Please submit a title and abstract of your proposed presentation of
no more than 300 words and provide us with the following details:
name, affiliation, email address.

The deadline for submission is 15 May 2020. Please note that
participants are responsible for their own travel and accommodation
arrangements and payment.

Conveners:
Prof. Bart Dessein (Ghent University)
Prof. Leigh K. Jenco (London School of Economics)
Dr. Julia C. Schneider (University College Cork)
Dr. Ady Van Den Stock (Ghent University)

Contact:
ady.vandenst...@ugent.be




__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
https://interphil.polylog.org

InterPhil List Archive:
https://www.mail-archive.com/interphil@list.polylog.org/

__________________________________________________

 

Reply via email to