Futures of Critique in a Pluricentric World

Futures of Critique in a Pluricentric World

A British Academy conference exploring horizons and methods of a critical theory for the 21st century

By Centre for Philosophy and Critical Thought

Select date and time

Friday, July 12 · 10am - 6pm GMT+1

Location

Richard Hoggart Building, Goldsmiths (Room 342)

Lewisham Way London SE14 6NW United Kingdom

Agenda

Friday, 12 July
Saturday, 13 July

10:00 AM

Welcome and Introductory Remarks

Dr. Julia Ng (Goldsmiths)

10:15 AM

After Decoloniality

Professor Dilip M Menon

11:30 AM

Critical Space-Times

Dr. Julia Ng

12:40 PM

Lunch break

2:00 PM

Critique, Baroque, and Capital

Professor Carlos Oliva Mendoza

3:15 PM

Critique and Scansion

Professor Nadia Bou Ali

4:30 PM

tbc

(speaker 5)

About this event

Taking as its premise that critical languages move multi-directionally between a plurality of centres rather than disseminate from a single, metropolitan axis of power, this conference considers the emergences, conflicts, suppressions, adaptations and mutations of concepts that take place at a distance from the loci traditionally associated with critical theory—metropolitan Europe, North America. The speakers explore, inter alia, cases of conceptual cross-pollinations across worlds and histories beyond the “Global North”; and the influence, facilitated by variously colonial and imperial conditions of linguistic and philosophical translation, of concepts from the “Global South” on the development of critical theory. Broadly construing critical theory to include not only Frankfurt School Critical Theory but also feminist and gender theory, eco-criticism, psychoanalysis, and postcolonial and decolonial theory among others, the conference will have a dual aim: (i) to frame critical theory as a productively unstable entity that retains intelligible markers of its origins in sociopolitical and epistemological “crises”; and (ii) “map” the historical and contemporary diversity of critical keywords, their translations, and the tools they provide us for articulating the emancipatory potentials of vocabularies be they indigenous, hybrid, or global.

Free and open to the public, though registration is required.

This event is the third of three associated with Dr. Julia Ng's British Academy Mid-Career Fellowship project Daoism and Capitalism: Early Critical Theory and the Global South (MCFSS23\230039). Thanks also go to Goldsmiths' Centre for Philosophy and Critical Thought for their generous support.

About the speakers

Hourya Bentouhami is a French-Moroccan Associate Professor of Philosophy at Université Toulouse Jean Jaurès, and a member of the Institut Universitaire de France. Her work on political philosophy and phenomenology focuses on the sensorial dynamics of racialization and gender assignment and on forms of economic dispossession as well as on the ways of disobeying them to create new forms of seeing and feeling in a livable world.

Nadia Bou Ali is Associate Professor and Director of the Critical Humanities for the Liberal Arts (CHLA) at the American University of Beirut. She is the author of Hall of Mirrors: Psychoanalysis and the Love of Arabic (Edinburgh University Press, 2020). She is co-editor (with Rohit Goel) of Lacan contra Foucault: Subjectivity, Sex, Politics (Bloomsbury 2018) and of Extimacies: Encounters Between Psychoanalysis and Philosophy (co-edited with Surti Singh), forthcoming from Northwestern University Press. She is also editing the first English translation of Mehdi Amel's Theoretical Prolegomenon on the Impact of Socialist Thought in the National Liberation Movement: On Contradiction and The Colonial Mode of Production for Brill's Historical Materialism Book Series. Nadia is a practicing analyst and member of The Lacan School, Bay Area, San Francisco.

Dilip M Menon is a Professor of History and International Relations and the Director of the Centre for Indian Studies in Africa, University of Witwatersrand. He is primarily a social historian of South Asia concerned with questions of caste and inequality. For the past decade he has been concerned with epistemologies from the global south and oceanic histories, and this has resulted in a series of edited volumes on capitalism, oceans, concepts, and cinema. A recent interview with Professor Menon can be found here: https://brill.com/view/journals/phen/8/4/article-p375_3.xml.

Carlos Oliva Mendoza is a writer and a professor at the National Autonomous University of Mexico's (UNAM) Faculty of Philosophy of Letters, as well as a member of the National System of Researchers (SNI). Among other recognitions, he is the recipient of the International Narrative Award, Siglo XII; the National Award for Young Essay; and the National Award for Literary Essay. He is lead for the research projects "Critical Theory in Latin America" and "Baroque Modernity and Mexican Thought." His latest published books are Cine mexicano y filosofía, Espacio y capital and Semiótica y capitalismo.

Pang Laikwan is Choh-Ming Li Professor of Cultural and Religious Studies and Chairperson of the Department of Cultural and Religious Studies at Chinese University Hong Kong. Her research spans a broad spectrum of issues related to culture in Modern and Contemporary China and Hong Kong. Her central philosophical project is the exploration of the dynamics between “many” and “one,” manifested in the intersections between culture and politics, copies and models, plurality and unity, as well as democracy and sovereignty. She is the author of a few books, and her scholarship has been recognized internationally. Her books received American Library Association (ALA) Choice 2020 Outstanding Academic Title and Chiang King-Kuo Foundation Publication Award. She herself also received the Discovery International Award offered by Australia Research Council, Research Excellence Award as well as Young Research Award by The Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Julia Ng is Reader in Critical Theory and founding Co-Director of the Centre for Philosophy and Critical Thought at Goldsmiths, University of London. She specialises in philosophical approaches to literature, modern German-Jewish thought, early 20th-century Germanophone literatures in their transnational contexts, and history of critical theory. Recent publications include her translation and critical edition of Walter Benjamin's "Toward the Critique of Violence" (with P. Fenves; Stanford UP, 2021) and articles in Theory Culture & Society, Paragraph, CR: New Centennial Review, Modern Language Notes, diacritics, and Critical Times. Funded by a British Academy Mid-Career Fellowship, she is currently completing a book on Daoism and Capitalism, which has also received support from the Leverhulme Trust, the Center for Jewish History (NYC), and the British Society for the History of Philosophy.

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