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ACGS Conference “Where Are We Now? Temporalities of Globalisation”

15 December 2016 - 16 December 2016

| €50

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Third Annual ACGS Conference Where Are We Now? Temporalities of Globalisation Amsterdam, 15-16 December 2016 Confirmed speakers: Amy Allen (Pennsylvania State University), Louise Amoore (Durham University), Rolando Vazquez (Utrecht University) Extended deadline for abstracts: 1 June 2016 Globalisation is often seen as a single process, unfolding in a single timeframe that serves as a universal measure. This synchronic, or perhapsbetter still, monochronic conception of globalisation’s temporality creates problematic distinctions between the ‘contemporary’ and the‘archaic’, between the ‘modern’ and the ‘traditional’ and between globalisation’s GMT and cultures, subjects and areas that are seen to remainout of time. Such a vision of the temporality of globalisation, and its underlying ‘denial of coevalness’ (Johannes Fabian), entails a perpetuation of the dominant narrative of modernisation and modernity as progress and temporal advance, as the integration (or lack thereof) in theuniversalising timeframe of the contemporary (Amy Allen). Today, we witness many cultural practices that challenge, refute or problematise thisnarrative: from new forms of cultural translation (including a validation of the untranslatable) and the proliferation of decolonialaltermodernities to the emergence of Euro-American populist nostalgia; from accelerationism and hyper-temporalities (such as that of climatechange), to renewed appraisals of slowness and reflection on the end of temporality (Fredric Jameson).   The 2016 Amsterdam Centre for Globalisation Studies conference highlights the urgency to reconsider globalisation from the perspective oftoday’s multiple temporalities. We want to explore new conceptualisations of the multiple, differentiated temporalities of globalisation. What if still dominant representations of globalisation as an unfolding process – an agent of sorts that is alternatively embraced, resisted, missed out on; that homogenises or pluralises – are simply inadequate to grasp what…
Third Annual ACGS Conference  Where Are We Now? Temporalities of Globalisation  Amsterdam, 15-16 December 2016  Confirmed speakers: Amy Allen (Pennsylvania State University), Louise Amoore (Durham University), Rolando Vazquez (Utrecht University)  Extended deadline for abstracts: 1 June 2016  Globalisation is often seen as a single process, unfolding in a single timeframe that serves as a universal measure. This synchronic, or perhapsbetter still, monochronic conception of globalisation’s temporality creates problematic distinctions between the ‘contemporary’ and the‘archaic’, between the ‘modern’ and the ‘traditional’ and between globalisation’s GMT and cultures, subjects and areas that are seen to remainout of time. Such a vision of the temporality of globalisation, and its underlying 'denial of coevalness' (Johannes Fabian), entails a perpetuation of the dominant narrative of modernisation and modernity as progress and temporal advance, as the integration (or lack thereof) in theuniversalising timeframe of the contemporary (Amy Allen). Today, we witness many cultural practices that challenge, refute or problematise thisnarrative: from new forms of cultural translation (including a validation of the untranslatable) and the proliferation of decolonialaltermodernities to the emergence of Euro-American populist nostalgia; from accelerationism and hyper-temporalities  (such as that of climatechange), to renewed appraisals of slowness and reflection on the end of temporality (Fredric Jameson).   The 2016 Amsterdam Centre for Globalisation Studies conference highlights the urgency to reconsider globalisation from the perspective oftoday’s multiple temporalities. We want to explore new conceptualisations of the multiple, differentiated temporalities of globalisation. What if still dominant representations of globalisation as an unfolding process – an agent of sorts that is alternatively embraced, resisted, missed out on; that homogenises or pluralises – are simply inadequate to grasp what we refer to as globalisation today? We call for contributions that investigateglobalisation as the simultaneity of different and radically divergent temporalities. Emerging decolonial temporalities (Walter Mignolo), Euro-American populist withdrawal, re-emerging imperialisms (U.S., Europe, Russia, Middle East, China), the project of de-imperialisation, de-Cold War and de-colonisation (Chen Kuan-Hsing), 24/7 neo-capitalism (Jonathan Crary), the hyper-temporality of climate change, imperial ruination (AnnLaura Stoler), the exclusion of states and regions (i.e. Africa, Greece) from the rhythms of neoliberal capitalism (Maurizio Lazzarato), high-speedfinancial trading, revelations of global economic warfare, aging workforces (Europe, Japan): all these examples demonstrate that globalisation, inits present, singular tense, no longer covers our fractured and multi-temporal present.   We invite theoretical and empirical interventions to analyse the ways in which globalisation’s manifold temporalities – and their problematization –appear in the socio-­‐ cultural realm: from decolonial cinema and novels flaunting their untranslatability to the way news and social media‘chase’ each other; from the use of extreme duration in theatre and contemporary art and the fashionability of yoga classes and mindfulnessto the global boom in plastic surgery and expressions of imperial nostalgia; from the seeming endlessness of crisis to regressive and progressive attempts to find a 'way out of here'.   The 2016 ACGS conference welcomes papers that explore the complexity and radical heterogeneity of today’s planetary temporalities. Possibletopics include: -      decolonial temporalities -      cultural translation and untranslatability -      out-of-timeness and 'backward' peripheries within globalised economic spheres (i.e. the Greek crisis, North Korea, Belarus) -      differences between and intersections of urban/rural temporalities -      chronotopias, from the Western metropolitan yearning for ‘slowness’ to dreams of fully automated market transactions -      affective temporalities, i.e. burn-out, exhaustion, YOLO/FOLO, things-to-do-before-you-‐die/bucket lists -      ecology: the hyper-temporality of climate change -      the temporal dimensions of neo-imperialisms, for example the Ukraine crisis, Euro‐American interference in the Middle East -      debris of empire, imperial ruinations -      cycles and crisis: social, financial, personal -      discourses of contemporaneity, i.e. the managerial/neoliberal rhetoric of ‘this is no longer of today’ -      utopias of timelessness, i.e. the Islamic State, populism, communism -      theories and representations of end times, i.e. biological extinction, the end of capitalism, the end of the welfare state, eschatological imaginaries in popular culture -      temporalities of precarity (flexibility, just-in-time, absent futures) -      the withering away of ‘the future’ as universal telos in culture and theory -      entropy in culture, economy and ecology -      temporalities of security (pre-emption and precaution) -      uneven development and creative destruction -      homogenisation of time as effect and condition of the logic of capital   Please submit an abstract (200-300 words) and short bio (max. 100 words) by 1 June 2016 to acgs-fgw@uva.nl. Notice of acceptance will be given by 15 June 2016. Conference fee: 50 Euros (25 Euros for PhD students). Conference dinner: 25 Euros.   Organisers: Joost de Bloois, Marieke de Goede, Yolande Jansen, Jeroen de Kloet, Esther Peeren, Kati Röttger.

Details

Start:
15 December 2016
End:
16 December 2016
Cost:
€50
Event Category:

Venue

Amsterdam, + Google Map

Third Annual ACGS Conference

 Where Are We Now? Temporalities of Globalisation

 Amsterdam, 15-16 December 2016

 Confirmed speakers: Amy Allen (Pennsylvania State University), Louise Amoore (Durham University), Rolando Vazquez (Utrecht University)

 Extended deadline for abstracts: 1 June 2016

 Globalisation is often seen as a single process, unfolding in a single timeframe that serves as a universal measure. This synchronic, or perhapsbetter still, monochronic conception of globalisation’s temporality creates problematic distinctions between the ‘contemporary’ and the‘archaic’, between the ‘modern’ and the ‘traditional’ and between globalisation’s GMT and cultures, subjects and areas that are seen to remainout of time. Such a vision of the temporality of globalisation, and its underlying ‘denial of coevalness’ (Johannes Fabian), entails a perpetuation of the dominant narrative of modernisation and modernity as progress and temporal advance, as the integration (or lack thereof) in theuniversalising timeframe of the contemporary (Amy Allen). Today, we witness many cultural practices that challenge, refute or problematise thisnarrative: from new forms of cultural translation (including a validation of the untranslatable) and the proliferation of decolonialaltermodernities to the emergence of Euro-American populist nostalgia; from accelerationism and hyper-temporalities  (such as that of climatechange), to renewed appraisals of slowness and reflection on the end of temporality (Fredric Jameson).

 

The 2016 Amsterdam Centre for Globalisation Studies conference highlights the urgency to reconsider globalisation from the perspective oftoday’s multiple temporalities. We want to explore new conceptualisations of the multiple, differentiated temporalities of globalisation. What if still dominant representations of globalisation as an unfolding process – an agent of sorts that is alternatively embraced, resisted, missed out on; that homogenises or pluralises – are simply inadequate to grasp what we refer to as globalisation today? We call for contributions that investigateglobalisation as the simultaneity of different and radically divergent temporalities. Emerging decolonial temporalities (Walter Mignolo), Euro-American populist withdrawal, re-emerging imperialisms (U.S., Europe, Russia, Middle East, China), the project of de-imperialisation, de-Cold War and de-colonisation (Chen Kuan-Hsing), 24/7 neo-capitalism (Jonathan Crary), the hyper-temporality of climate change, imperial ruination (AnnLaura Stoler), the exclusion of states and regions (i.e. Africa, Greece) from the rhythms of neoliberal capitalism (Maurizio Lazzarato), high-speedfinancial trading, revelations of global economic warfare, aging workforces (Europe, Japan): all these examples demonstrate that globalisation, inits present, singular tense, no longer covers our fractured and multi-temporal present.

 

We invite theoretical and empirical interventions to analyse the ways in which globalisation’s manifold temporalities – and their problematization –appear in the socio-­‐ cultural realm: from decolonial cinema and novels flaunting their untranslatability to the way news and social media‘chase’ each other; from the use of extreme duration in theatre and contemporary art and the fashionability of yoga classes and mindfulnessto the global boom in plastic surgery and expressions of imperial nostalgia; from the seeming endlessness of crisis to regressive and progressive attempts to find a ‘way out of here’.

 

The 2016 ACGS conference welcomes papers that explore the complexity and radical heterogeneity of today’s planetary temporalities. Possibletopics include:

–      decolonial temporalities

–      cultural translation and untranslatability

–      out-of-timeness and ‘backward’ peripheries within globalised economic spheres (i.e. the Greek crisis, North Korea, Belarus)

–      differences between and intersections of urban/rural temporalities

–      chronotopias, from the Western metropolitan yearning for ‘slowness’ to dreams of fully automated market transactions

–      affective temporalities, i.e. burn-out, exhaustion, YOLO/FOLO, things-to-do-before-you-‐die/bucket lists

–      ecology: the hyper-temporality of climate change

–      the temporal dimensions of neo-imperialisms, for example the Ukraine crisis, Euro‐American interference in the Middle East

–      debris of empire, imperial ruinations

–      cycles and crisis: social, financial, personal

–      discourses of contemporaneity, i.e. the managerial/neoliberal rhetoric of ‘this is no longer of today’

–      utopias of timelessness, i.e. the Islamic State, populism, communism

–      theories and representations of end times, i.e. biological extinction, the end of capitalism, the end of the welfare state, eschatological imaginaries in popular culture

–      temporalities of precarity (flexibility, just-in-time, absent futures)

–      the withering away of ‘the future’ as universal telos in culture and theory

–      entropy in culture, economy and ecology

–      temporalities of security (pre-emption and precaution)

–      uneven development and creative destruction

–      homogenisation of time as effect and condition of the logic of capital

 

Please submit an abstract (200-300 words) and short bio (max. 100 words) by 1 June 2016 to acgs-fgw@uva.nl. Notice of acceptance will be given by 15 June 2016. Conference fee: 50 Euros (25 Euros for PhD students). Conference dinner: 25 Euros.

 

Organisers: Joost de Bloois, Marieke de Goede, Yolande Jansen, Jeroen de Kloet, Esther Peeren, Kati Röttger.

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