PHILOSOPHY OF THE CITY: 10th Anniversary Conference

Wed, Oct 4, 2023

9:00 AM–5:00 PM

Brooklyn College Student Center, Gold, Maroon and State Rooms, 2705 Campus Rd, Brooklyn, NY 11210. Click below to Register.

PHILOSOPHY OF THE CITY: 10th Anniversary Conference
Oct 4-6th, 2023, Brooklyn College Student Center, Gold, Maroon and State Rooms, 2705 Campus Rd, Brooklyn, NY 11210.

The conference is sponsored by the Philosophy of the City Research Group and hosted by the Department of Philosophy, Brooklyn College, CUNY. This conference is co-sponsored by the Urban Sustainability Program at Brooklyn College, the Center for the Humanities at the CUNY Graduate Center and the College of Liberal Arts and Community Urban Sustainability at Long Island University-Brooklyn.

CLICK HERE TO REGISTER Or go to www.potc.org

Contact: [email protected]

Find the full schedule for the conference below:



CONFERENCE SCHEDULE

DAY 1 WEDNESDAY OCT 4

9:00 am-9:15 am – Welcome and coffee

9:15 – 10:45 – SESSION 1

Session 1A STATE LOUNGE 5th floor

“Urban Diversity: Fact or Value?,” Marian Counihan (University of Groningen)

“Urban Justice: A Recognition-Theoretical Perspective,” Bart van Leeuwen (Radboud University)

“A philosophical analysis of the construction of the urban woman in cinema. The iconology of the passante,”Isabel Argüelles Rozada (University of Oviedo)

9:15-10:45 am Session 1B MAROON ROOM 6th floor

Panel Discussion: Philosophy In the City: For Whom? By Whom?

Joseph Biehl (St. John’s University/Gotham Philosophical Society, Inc.)

Samantha Noll (Washington State University)

Ian Olasov (Brooklyn College)

Sandra Lapointe (McMaster University)

Sergio Gallegos (John Jay College of Criminal Justice)

Chair: Linda Alcoff (Hunter College/CUNY


SESSION 2

11 am– 12:30, 2A MAROON ROOM 6th floor

“There is No Demonstration in Disneyland: Ethical impact of exploitation of public realm in favor of private values,” Aneta Kohoutová (University of Pardubice)

“Tourism and marginalization. The touristic city as a locus of marginalization,”

Daniel Guillery (London School of Economics) and Elisabetta Gobbo (Erasmus University)

“The Spatial Experience of Loneliness in City,” Xinyi Angela Zhao, University of British Columbia

Chair: Matt Lindauer (Brooklyn College)

11am– 12:30, Session 2B GOLD ROOM 6th floor

“Building Sustainable Affordable Housing At All Income Levels,” David Woods, (GreenWoods Associates & NYU)

“The Sonic Environment and Gentrification,” Kwabena Edusei (Hamilton College)

-Chair: Michael Menser (Brooklyn College)

11 am– 12:30, Session 2C STATE LOUNGE 5th floor

Joseph Biehl, St. John’s University/Gotham Philosophical Society, Inc, Is There No Business Like Human Show Business?

“Guerilla Gardening Movement: from Urban Space to Internet Space,” Maciej Kędzierski (Adam Mickiewicz University)

“Urban AI Infraethics, ”Otello Palmini (University of Ferrara)

Chair: Simone Parker (CUNY GC)

12:30 – 2 pm LUNCH (Served on Site) GOLD ROOM 6th floor

2:00 – 3:30, Session 3A MAROON ROOM 6th floor

“Political Places and the Place of the Political: Where City Meets Contemporary Identities, Irandina Afonso (University of Porto)

“Defining ‘Public Space’ for Philosophers of the City,” Ryan Wittingslow (University of Groningen)

“Cities as Political Technologies,” Lauri Lahikainen (Tampere University)

2:00 – 3:30, Session 3B GOLD ROOM 6th floor

“The Five Pillars of Urban Justice: A Framework for Building Equitable Cities,”

Samantha Noll and Tuhina Bhar (Washington State University)

“Outlines for an urban theory of justice,” Francisco Colom-Gonzalez (Spanish National Research Council)

“The Sense of Community: Towards a New Philosophy of Recognition in the Age of Artificial Intelligence,” Kristina Khutsishvili (University of Bologna)



2:00 – 3:30, Session 3C STATE LOUNGE 5th floor

“Brooklyn: Fieldwork for Philosophers,” Marian Counihan and Ryan Wittingslow (University of Groningen)

3:45 – 5:00, Keynote: GOLD ROOM 6th floor

“Philosophy of the City: an emergency response or a philosophical imperative?”

Paula Cristina Pereira (University of Porto)



Day 2, THURSDAY, October 5

9:15 – 10:45, Session 4A STATE LOUNGE 5th floor

“Overstepping the binary dichotomy of Order versus Chaos: interpretations of informal urbanism in Arab countries,” Vladan Klement (Czech Technical University in Prague)

“The cities of Italo Calvino, Nicoli Siddi (University of Turin)

“The theory of moments of Henri Lefebvre,” Carla Rivera Blanco (City University of New York)

Chair: Daniel Campos (Brooklyn College)

9:15 – 10:45, Session 4B MAROON ROOM 6th floor

“City Trouble: Merleau-Ponty’s Way to Extricate from Ontological City/Nature Dualism,” Žygimantas Menčenkovas (Vytautas Magnus University)

“Philosophy and the Rural-to-Urban Transect,” Gerald Erion, (Daemen University)

“Cities in sustainability transformation,” Anni Jäntti (Tampere University)

9:15-10:45am Session 4C GOLD ROOM 6th floor

“Pluralist Poetic Pedagogy: Untangling Urban Despair,” Yanai Sened (Fordham University)

“Remaking Urban Home Spaces in the Wake of the Pandemic,” Quill Kukla (Georgetown University)

Chair: Patricia Cipolitti (CUNY GC)

11 – 12:30 – Session 5A STATE LOUNGE 5th floor

“Mapping collective housing journeys of gender and criminalization,” Sarah Gelbard (University of Ottawa)

“Urban displacement and affective injustice,” Pilar Lopez-Cantero (Tilburg University)

“Margalitian Self-Respect and the Right to Housing,” Niklas Dummer (Technical University Dortmund)

11 – 12:30 – Session 5B MAROON ROOM 5th floor

“Aesthetic Categories of Urban Experience: Surveying Conceptual Tools for an Aesthetics of the City,” Nuno Fonseca

“The Peril and Promise of Urban Street Photography,” Mckay Holland (Georgetown University)

“Space development and the dominating nature of spatial injustices,” Elisabetta Gobbo (Erasmus University)

11-12:30 Session 5C GOLD ROOM 6th floor

“The Role of Anonymity in Urban Living,” Maria João Couto (Universidade do Porto)

“Morality and Sidewalk Safety: Pedestrians as Marginalized Populations,” Savannah Stevens (University of North Texas)

“The Philippine Jeepney: Contesting Space and Pursuing Justice in a Megacity,”

Remmon Barbaza (Ateneo de Manila University)

12:30 – 2pm Lunch on Site GOLD ROOM 6th floor

2pm-3:30 Session 6A GOLD ROOM 6th floor

“A Superfund Idyll: Dredging Post-Capitalist Climate Futures from the Gowanus,” Matthew Bower (The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art)

“Opportunity Seekers or Exogenous Shock? Neoliberal Ontologies and Teleologies of the City and the Disempowerment of Transnational and Transient Populations,”

Chayce Kenny (Rutgers University)

“Scaling Mt. Trash: Platonic vs. Aristotelian Waste Management Policy,” Melissa May F. Cardenas (Environweave) and Jonald John Morales (Ateneo de Manila University)

Chair: Serene Khader (Brooklyn College)

2-3:30, Session 6B STATE LOUNGE 5th floor

“Avant-garde dream practice,” Tanja Tiekso (University of Helsinki)

“The City is a Metaphor,” Milan Ney (CUNY/St. Hilda’s, Oxford)

“Neurourbanism. Toward and Enactive Neurophilosophy of the City,”

Joerg Fingerhut (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin)

2pm-3:30, Session 6C MAROON ROOM 6th floor

“Georg Simmel and the genealogy of a new urban aesthetic,” Andrea Borsari (University of Bologna)

“Octavio Paz’s Cosmopolitanism: Embracing the City of Delhi, India (urban aesthetics),” Jules Simon (University of Texas at El Paso)

“The continuity of the steel walls and dry trees. The artwork as a fold between the city and the landscape,” Filip Šenk (Technical University Liberec)

3:45 – 5pm – Keynote 2 Michael Nagenborg (University of Twente), Codirector’s Address GOLD ROOM 6th floor


Day 3 FRIDAY

9:15 – 10:45, Session 7A GOLD ROOM 6th floor

Ethnographic Approaches to Urban Theory, A Panel Discussion

Margaret Kohn (University of Toronto)

Daniel Weinstock (McGill University)

Loren King (Wilfrid Laurier University)

Clarissa Hayward (Washington University in St. Louis)

11 – 12:30 – Session 8A STATE LOUNGE 5th floor

“A Phenomenological Sojourn in Manhattan,” John Kaiser Ortiz (Millersville University)

“Continuing Pragmatism’s Narrative Webwork: Who Urban People Really Are and What Kinds of Institutions We Really Need Now,” Judith Green (Fordham University)

“Book Bans: An Existential Crisis for the Whole City,” Heidi Schmidt (University of Kentucky)

11-12:30pm Session 8B GOLD ROOM 6th floor

“Book Discussion: The City is an Ecosystem: Sustainable Education, Policy and Practice”

Deborah Mutnick, LIU

Jay Shuttleworth, Queens College CUNY

Carole Griffiths, LIU/American Museum of Natural History

Timothy Leslie, LIU

Margaret Cuonzo, LIU

Jerry Krase, CUNY

12:30 – 1:45pm, Lunch and Grad Students Awards GOLD ROOM 6th floor


1:45 – 3:15 – KEYNOTE GOLD ROOM 6th floor

“Big or Small, Irreplaceability Beckons”

Lewis Gordon, University of Connecticut

Lewis R. Gordon is Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor of Philosophy and Global Affairs and Head of the Department of Philosophy at the University of Connecticut. He also is Distinguished Scholar at The Most Honourable PJ Patterson Centre for Africa-Caribbean Advocacy at The University of the West Indies, Mona. He is the author of many books, including, most recently,Freedom, Justice, and Decolonization (Routledge, 2021); Fear of Black Consciousness (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, and Penguin-UKK 2022);Black Existentialism and Decolonizing Knowledge: Writings of Lewis R. Gordon edited by Rozena Maart and Sayan Dey (Bloomsbury, 2023); and“Not Bad for an N—, No?”/ «Pas mal pour un N—, n’est-ce pas? » (Daraja Press, 2023). His accolades include the 2022 Eminent Scholar Award from the Global Development Studies division of the International Studies Association.

Chair: Kobie Colemon (Brooklyn College)

3:30 -5:00 Session 9A, Panel: Philosophy of the City— 10 Years Later, What’s Next

GOLD ROOM 6th floor

Presentation, Shane Epting (Missouri Univ. Science and Technology), “Research in Philosophy of the City”

Discussion: Judith Green (Fordham U.), Michael Menser (Brooklyn College), Shane Epting (Missouri Univ. Science and Technology), plus special guests!


On the Philosophy of the City Research Group

The Philosophy of the City Research Group takes the city as an object of study, focusing on its political, social, epistemological, metaphysical, ethical, and environmental dimensions. We hold conferences annually. Membership is open to anyone with an interest in the philosophical dimensions of the city. Attending a conference makes you a member for three years.