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From:
Ina Kerner <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Ina Kerner <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 15 Apr 2011 15:07:31 +0200
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Dear all,

The Center for transdisciplinary Gender Studies at Humboldt- 
Universität zu Berlin (Germany) is hosting  a conference on  
collectivity from June 28-30 next year and invites you to  submit  
abstracts for papers.


CFP: Collectivity beyond Identity -- Berlin, June 28-30, 1012

Modes of collectivity play an important role in numerous contexts of  
our social and everyday
lives. Collectives form the basis of political practice and  
engagement, as well as of economic and
labour relations. Collectivity appears to be a particularly important  
concept to consider
especially in areas like feminist theorizing once subjecthood is  
critically examined, and not
construed as sovereign and isolated.

Critical theory, however, has drawn our attention to the fact that  
collectives, and in particular
those derived from attributions of identity, often result in exclusion  
and even violence.
Questions were raised about the ways in which power relations and  
differences become
disguised when groups, like that of women within the so‐called second  
wave feminism, are
construed as homogenic. Following such critiques, various attempts  
have been made to provide
more complex analyses of power relations, which also take into account  
internal group
differences. This, however, raises a further issue: how might we  
rethink community, and how
can we conceive of collectivity, when the seemingly crucial aspect of  
collectivization – identity –
has become the object of critical study?

It appears, then, that the problem of plurality cannot be responded to  
by invoking the notion of
collective subjects. In fact, critiques of the notion of the subject  
have had the result of dissolving
it into plural and contextually various notions, which themselves  
often remain undetermined.
Given this, we want to ask further: Which conceptions of collectivity  
can deal with and survive
the critical examinations of subjecthood? How can acting, working and  
living in concert be
analyzed? Which connecting forces remain, when one doesn't simply  
gloss over the divisive
ones?

The critical tools of feminist theory, and in particular the input  
from Queer and Postcolonial
Studies, point to a productive examination of belonging and  
(political) community. They may
even contribute to visionary suggestions that bear on the general  
debate about collectives. This
is even more so, as these theoretical and critical tools can helpfully  
examine and analyze the
diverse experiences and experimentations of social movements that have  
already taken place.

The conference, then, asks the following questions (among others):
− On which theoretical and/ or empirical grounds can collectivity be  
defined?
− What is collective experience, and what generates collective action?
− Which forms of desire and affectivity structure collectives?
− How do questions of power, recognition and identity arise in  
collective contexts and
what are the effects of these questions on gender?
− How, in political and judicial contexts, can we deal with the  
difficulty of categorization?
− Which conceptions of collectivity can be taken up and developed  
further in fruitful ways?
− Which experiences and reflections of transnational political  
collectivity seem promising?
− And what, if anything, would a distinctly feminist perspective be  
with respect to these
questions?

The conference is bilingual (German/English) and transdisciplinary. It  
is aimed at scholars from
all disciplines, whose work deals with the questions (or other similar  
ones) suggested above.
Please send abstracts (one page in length) for papers suitable to be  
delivered in 20 mins and to
be anonymously reviewed to: [log in to unmask]‐berlin.de. Please also  
include a short CV as a
separate document with your submission.
The deadline for submissions is 23rd of May, 2011.

Organizers at HU Berlin: Sophia Ermert (Law), Gabriele Jähnert  
(Gender‐Studies), Ina Kerner (Social Sciences), Mari Mikkola  
(Philosophy), Eva von Redecker (Philosophy).






----------------------------------------------------------------
Prof. Dr. Ina Kerner
Juniorprofessur für Diversity Politics
Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Philosophische Fakultät III
Institut für Sozialwissenschaften
Unter den Linden 6
10099 Berlin

Sitz: Universitätsstraße 3b, Zimmer 330
Telefon: +49 (0)30 20931531
Fax: 	+49 (0)30 2093 4491

Email: [log in to unmask]
www.sowi.hu-berlin.de/lehrbereiche/divpol







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