Call for Papers

"Globalization and Resistance"
2nd Graduate Student Conference of the English & Philosophy
Ph.D. Program
Purdue University
West Lafayette, IN (USA)
3-5 March 2006


In order promote interdisciplinary dialogue about the
effects that globalization-and resistance to
globalization-are having on our present political and
cultural situation, the graduate students of Purdue
University's English and Philosophy Program are hosting an
interdisciplinary conference oriented around these two
themes. In response to the current state of generalized
terror and perpetual war, our understandings of both
globalization and resistance are inevitably taking on new
forms. We therefore invite paper submissions from graduate
students and scholars throughout the humanities that address
these issues, and that take into account the following
concerns and questions animating social-political philosophy
and theory:

- How do we understand the phenomena of, and relations
between, globalization and resistance?
- What implications might the one have for the other in
discourses committed to articulating viable theories of
political praxis?
- Is globalization something to be resisted or a form of
political resistance?
- Which among our political theories-neo-liberalist,
Marxist, anarchist, and so on-appear to be most viable
viable in a globalized world?
- How do philosophical concepts-such as the bio-political,
the juridical, deterritorialization, hegemony, the state of
exception, the multitude, etc.-help us to articulate
theories of resistance and responses to globalization?
- How has globalization impacted the discourses of race,
gender, sexual orientation, and class?
- How does one become a citizen in a globalized world?

Speakers:

Keynote Address: "Crises of Money and Terror," Pheng Cheah,
University of California, Berkeley

Pheng Cheah is Associate Professor in the Department of
Rhetoric at the University of California, Berkeley, holds a
Ph.D in English Literature from Cornell. His teaching and
writing range across a wide spectrum of interests, including
18th-20th century continental philosophy and critical
theory, postcolonial theory and Anglophone postcolonial
literatures, theory of globalization, philosophy and
literature, legal philosophy, social and political thought,
feminist theory. He is the author of Spectral Nationality:
Passages of Freedom from Kant to Postcolonial Literatures of
Liberation (2003), as well as several edited collections,
including Thinking Through the Body of the Law (1996, with
David Fraser and Judith Grbich), Cosmopolitics: Thinking and
Feeling Beyond the Nation (1998, with Bruce Collins), and
Grounds for Comparison: Around the Work of Benedict Anderson
(2003, with Jonathan Culler), and a special issue of
Diacritics entitled "Irigaray and The Political Future of
Sexual Difference" (1998, with Elizabeth Grosz).

Plenary Speaker: "Why Anarchism Now?" Todd May, Clemson
University

Todd May is Professor in the Department of Philosophy at
Clemson University, where he specializes in continental
philosophy, and especially recent French philosophy. He is
the author of many books, including Gilles Deleuze: An
Introduction (2005), The Moral Theory of Poststructuralism
(2004), Our Practices, Our Selves, Or, What It Means to Be
Human (2001), Reconsidering Difference: Nancy, Derrida,
Levinas, and Deleuze (1997), The Political Philosophy of
Poststructuralist Anarchism (1994), Between Genealogy and
Epistemology: Psychology, Politics, and Knowledge in the
Thought of Michel Foucault (1993). He is also written a
novel, Blue Night (2004), and is the editor of Twentieth
Century Continental Philosophy (1996) and Operation
Defensive Shield: Witnesses to Israeli War Crimes (2003,
with Muna Hamzeh).

Submission of Abstracts:

Detailed abstracts for papers or panels should be submitted
electronically (500-750 words). Full papers (10-12 pages,
double-spaced) may be submitted if accompanied by an
abstract. Presenters will have 20 minutes to present their
paper, following by 10 minutes of discussion. Submit
abstracts (and all other conference related queries) to the
conference co-organizers: Robert King ([email protected]),
Sol Neely ([email protected]), or Nathan Jun
([email protected]).

Deadline for Abstracts: November 30, 2005

Conference website:
http://web.ics.purdue.edu/~sjneely/globalization.htm

Faculty contact:
Daniel W. Smith ([email protected])

Director of the English and Philosophy Ph.D. Program:
Charlene Seigfried ([email protected])

Department of Philosophy
Purdue University
100 N. University Street
West Lafayette, IN 47907-2098
USA
tel. +1 (765) 494-4276
fax  +1 (765) 496-1616

For more program information, check periodically the web
site of The English and Philosophy Ph.D. Program:
http://www.cla.purdue.edu/academic/idis/phil-lit/



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