Philosophy Seminars 2013
The Writing and Society Research Centre and Philosophy@UWS present:

Marcelo Svirsky
University of Wollongong

TITLE: After Israel: On Subjectivity and Profanation

DATE/TIME: Wednesday 18 September, 3.30 pm - 5.00 pm

PLACE: University of Western Sydney, Bankstown Campus, Building 3, Room 3.G.54  
[How to get to Bankstown 
Campus]<http://www.uws.edu.au/campuses_structure/cas/campuses/bankstown>

Abstract
Analyses of colonial events such as the event of Israel in Palestine are 
inclined to engage with political solutions, as if sophisticated 
conceptualisations of sovereignty and exchanges of land and borders will save 
us. But no political solution can provide the cultural marrow utterly necessary 
to substantiate a thorough transformation of ways of life - without which 
colonial domination reproduces itself. Forget then, about two-states or 
one-state. Disabling colonial domination, I argue in this presentation, is 
first and foremost about the transformation of colonial subjectivities. 
However, to rescue the study of subjectivity from the traps of the dark sides 
of power, processes of subjective constitution need to be read through the lens 
of profanatory action. In this philosophical undertaking Giorgio Agamben's 
notion of profanation and his call to profane the sacred - our own 
subjectivities - in the most desacralised forms proves beneficial if conceived 
as a process of becoming. As a corollary, aftering Israel means profaning the 
complicity between the subject of theory and the Zionist subject; namely, it is 
about disarming the resonance between the prioritisation of the political 
paradigm over the cultural paradigm on the one hand, and the colonial subject 
that this prioritisation reproduces on the other hand.

Biography
Marcelo Svirsky is a Lecturer in International Studies at the School of History 
& Politics in the University of Wollongong. He has recently published 
Arab-Jewish Activism in Israel/Palestine (Ashgate, 2012), Agamben and 
Colonialism (Edinburgh University Press, edited with Simone Bignall, 2012), and 
a special issue of Deleuze Studies, Deleuze and Political Activism (Edinburgh: 
Edinburgh university Press, 2010). His forthcoming books are: After Israel - 
Towards Cultural Transformation (Zed Books, 2013), and Collaborative Struggles 
in Settler-Colonial Societies (ed.), Settler Colonial Studies, Special Issue 
(Routledge - Taylor & Francis Group, 2014).

For the entire 2013 program of the Philosophy seminar series at UWS please 
visit: 
http://www.uws.edu.au/philosophy/philosophy@uws/events/research_seminars_2013

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- - - - - - - - -
Mariana Fragueiro
Administration Coordinator, Philosophy Research Initiative
University of Western Sydney
Bankstown Campus Building 5
Locked Bag 1797
Penrith NSW  2751
+61 2 9772 6190



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