Terms of Engagement

Thu, Apr 11, 2019

10:30 AM–6:00 PM

Martin E. Segal Theatre

We live in an era of alternative facts where words seem to have lost their meaning and any grounding in material life, a condition that invites sustained consideration of the relationship between language, power, and practice. The concept of “forms of life”—which foregrounds how semantics and behavior are co-constitutive—offers a mode of investigating the entwinement of linguistic and material practices and possibilities. How does the undermining of shared understandings contribute to political projects of domination and oppression? What language might critics of the status quo summon to reach disillusioned and alienated audiences? In what ways might semantic practices preclude or enable the exercise of power? And, how do these dynamics function at the elite level and on the level of the ordinary?

SCHEDULE:

10:30am: Check in, coffee and light breakfast served

11:10am: Welcome

11:15am – 12:45pm: The Extra/Ordinary: #care #reflex #pathologiesofpower

Sandra Laugier, Philosophy, Université Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne

Kyoo Lee, Philosophy, John Jay College & the Graduate Center

B Stone, Political Science, the Graduate Center

1:00pm – 2:30pm: Lunch Break

2:30pm – 4:00pm: The Fragility of Privilege: #victimology #whiteness #rage

Alyson Cole, Political Science, Queens College & the Graduate Center

Charles Mills, Philosophy, the Graduate Center

Claire Potter, History, The New School for Social Research

4:00pm – 4:30pm: Break, coffee and snacks served

4:30pm – 6:00pm: Resilience as Resistance: #rape #vulnerability #blacklivesmatter

Linda Martín Alcoff, Philosophy, Hunter College & the Graduate Center

Estelle Ferrarese, Philosophy, Picardie-Jules-Verne University

Deva Woodly, Politics, The New School for Social Research


This public workshop of the International Research Network, “Vulnerable and Dynamic Forms of Life,” in conversation with local scholars, will consider these and other critical questions about language, truth, and power in our current moment of human and environmental precarity. The event will be organized as a series of conversations throughout the day. Each of the presenters will speak about a concept central to their scholarship—such as #rage, #victimology, #blacklivesmatter, #vulnerability, #care—followed by open discussion with other attendees.

The “Vulnerable and Dynamic Forms of Life” International Research Network (GDRI) was formed in 2016 with the aim of organizing a distinct research field beyond disciplinary boundaries and intellectual traditions centered on the conception of “forms of life” from the ordinary language philosophy tradition of Wittgenstein, Cavell, and Austin, and the critical theory canon of Horkheimer, Foucault, and Agamben, among others. From ethics to sociology, from anthropology to politics, and as a major point of contact between the social sciences and the life sciences, “forms of life” enables critique of that which presents itself simply as given, and the conceptualization of new vulnerabilities of human forms of life.

Participants:

Click here to download the workshop poster.

Co-sponsored by the Advanced Research Collaborative, Africana Studies Program, Anthropology Program, Philosophy Program, Political Science Program, the Center for the Humanities, The Office of the Provost, Women’s and Gender Studies Program.

With generous support from The Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Paris.

Participants

Tags
Theory Philosophy