Hermeneutic Conflict, Cultural Entanglement, and Social Inequality. Power of Interpretation in Intersectional Perspective

Hermeneutic Conflict, Cultural Entanglement, and Social Inequality. Power of Interpretation in Intersectional Perspective

Organizer
DFG-Graduate School “Hermeneutic Hegemony and Hermeneutic Conflict in Religion and Belief Systems”
Venue
Location
Rostock
Country
Germany
From - Until
22.09.2016 - 24.09.2016
Deadline
15.04.2016
Website
By
Prof. Dr. Gesa Mackenthun

The symposium seeks to combine theoretical issues developed in the work of the graduate school “Hermeneutic Hegemony and Hermeneutic Conflict in Religion and Belief Systems” with questions of cultural and social difference and inequality reflected upon in the theoretical field of intersectionality. The task is to investigate practices of religion and other forms of belief as categories of cultural difference together with social-cultural categories such as race/ethnicity, nationality/citizenship, class/social position, education, gender, desire, health/ability and age among others.

The symposium is designed to generate discussion and intellectual exchange about the benefits and possible disadvantages of ‘intersectional’ approaches to the study of hermeneutic hegemony based on such categories of distinction. It emphasizes the performative aspects of “knowledge objects” and scientific knowledge production in order to reflect on the entanglement between scientific description/analysis and the formation of inequalities.

Critical attention will focus on
- how constructions of subject positions become hegemonic and how collective and individual agency counters such ascriptions/interpellations;
- how to assess the relationship between agency-oriented and structuralist theories of power;
- which mobilizing effects interpretation may have on the emergence and consolidation of social/cultural power;
- which strategies counter-hegemonic representations may take in order to generate visibility/audibility.

The hermeneutic power of “religion” and other cultural discourses will be analyzed with reference to particular examples such as conflicts between Christian and ‘pagan’ beliefs, hegemonic relations between science and (other) belief systems, representations and visualizations of social inequality, enactment of bodies, constitution of (gender) identities, processes of othering, among others.
Next to interrogating the uses of intersectional approaches themselves, the symposium wants to bring together scholars skilled in cross-disciplinary and multiperspectival approaches to phenomena of cultural and social inequality. Disciplines include cultural studies, legal studies, religious studies, theology, literature, history, sociology, and anthropology. The aim is to collect case studies showing the analytical potential (i.e. the hermeneutic power) of such intersectional approaches both in the historical and contemporary humanities.

Confirmed speakers include Laura Donaldson, Rebecca Tsosie, John J. Kucich, Michael Meuser, Paula-Irene Villa, Shulamit Volkov, Ina Kerner.

We invite papers that speak to one or more of the mentioned aspects. Please send a 300 word abstract to the organizers below.

Programm

Contact (announcement)

Gesa Mackenthun

Nordamerikanische Literatur- und Kulturwissenschaft Universität Rostock August-Bebel-Str. 28 18055 R

gesa.mackenthun@uni-rostock.de


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Nobility, History of agriculture, Work and labour, Labour movement history, Archaeology, Historical semantics, Business history, Historical demography, History of education and university , Biography, Middle classes / Bourgeoisie, Digital history, Discipline and subject of history, Remembrance / Collective memory, Ethnology / Historical Anthropology, History of european integration, Women's, men's and gender History, History of leisure and sport, History of ideas, Intellectual history, Didactics / Public History, Historiography, Antisemitism research, History of images, Discourse analysis, History of peace and war, Historical auxiliary sciences, History of empires, Industrial history, history of trade and business, History of international relations, Jewish history, Church history, Colonial history, Consumption history, Crime and deviancy, Culture, Cultural history, Art history, Literature history, Media history, History of medicine, Intellectual history, Micro-, local history, everyday life, Military history, Musicology, History of nazism, History of fascism, History of nationalism, History of natural sciences, Oral history, History of political parties and organisations, Politics, Political history, Postcolonial history, Geography, Law, History of law and administration, Local and regional history, History of religions, confessions and churches, Reception history, Social history / Social sciences, Social Affairs, Urban history, History of technology, Theory and methodology, Transnational history, Environmental history, Constitutional history, Comparative history, Transport and infrastructure, World and global history, Economy, Economic history, Science, History of science, Science policy, History of knowledge
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English
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