IASH Winter School 2013: 'Timing TransFormations'

IASH Winter School 2013: 'Timing TransFormations'

Veranstalter
Institute of Advanced Study in the Humanities and the Social Sciences IASH, Universität Bern
Veranstaltungsort
Schloss Münchenwiler, bei Bern/Murten
Ort
Bern
Land
Switzerland
Vom - Bis
10.02.2013 - 15.02.2013
Deadline
20.10.2012
Von
Michael Toggweiler

Temporalities and notions of progress and innovation formed in Western modernity have been instrumentalized to structure developments and ordering things. But past and present transformations are too complex and ambivalent to be adequately explained by monocausal and linear narratives of change. In the course of reflecting time and timing, the key concepts of modernist and economic notions of linear historicity as well as a strict sequentiality of stasis and change have been questioned. The modern conception of History has become just one possible manifestation within a plurality of histories conditioned by socio-cultural particularities. We are no longer interested only in the history of timetables, calendars, time markers or clocks – taking and making linear time and space as human universals – but in post-isms, pre-isms and anachronisms, reactivations and revivals, devolutions, constant flows and nonlinear dynamics – in short, in timing trans/formations in the era of globalization, bio- and necropolitics and asymmetrical power relations. The Winter School 2013 analyses, discusses and challenges both modernist and postmodernist epistemologies as well as scientific paradigms of development and change from a historical, sociological, cultural and philosophical perspective.

Invited guests and the probable focus of their lecture in the morning sessions of the Winter School:

Prof. Dr. Rosi Braidotti (Philosophy, Director of the Centre for the Humanities, University of Utrecht) Biopower, Necropolitics, Anthropocene, technology and human evolution.

PD Dr. Stefan Herbrechter (Cultural Theory, Dep. of Media, School of Art and Design, University of Coventry) Postisms, postmodern theory, critical posthumanism, constructions of the future.

PD Dr. Antje Flüchter (History, Cluster Asia and Europe, University of Heidelberg) Pre-modern and modern European-Indian encounter and perception, transformations of knowledge archives, non-linearity, modern narratives of linearity.

Additional guest lecturer to be announced soon

Programm

The Winter School will be discussion-oriented. Daily morning sessions will include lectures given by four international scholars addressing the topic from various angles, followed by responses and plenary discussions. These sessions will prepare the ground for more general discussions in the master classes held in the afternoon. The workshop-like master classes focus on key concepts and core texts the participants will suggest in advance of the Winter School. There will be no lengthy presentations of individual work; posters of participants’ research will foster informal exchange throughout the week instead. Moreover, the workshops encourage the development of collaborations on shared research questions between at least two participants beyond the conference. Social media (website, blog, facebook) will be made available to connect participants before the conference and to document the discussions.

Kontakt

michael.toggweiler@iash.unibe.ch

http://wsblog.iash.unibe.ch/