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Call for Applications

"Towards a Global Humanities: Critical Traditions from the
Global South"
1st Global Humanities Institute
Brown International Advanced Research Institutes (BIARI),
Brown University
Providence, RI (USA)
31 May - 13 June 2009

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Brown International Advanced Research Institutes (BIARI)
holds its first Global Humanities Institute on Critical
Traditions from the Global South, for new faculty and
scholar/ practitioners, May 31-June 13, 2009, on Brown
University's Rhode Island Campus. Scholars from the Global
South are especially encouraged to apply. Applications
accepted online at www.brown.edu/biari until April 15. Brown
Institutes provide opportunities for encountering new ideas,
building collegial relationships and enriching faculty
development.

"Towards a Global Humanities: Critical Traditions from the
Global South" will convene scholars for an intensive two-week
Institute on the emergence and evolution, across
disciplines, of critical intellectual engagements with a
wide range of historical and contemporary experiences of the
Global South. The Institute will re-examine paradigmatic
shifts within these critical traditions, asking what a
"global humanities" means, and what it might look like in
today's world. The Institute will invoke and respond to
intellectual currents of the past in order to open up space
for radical reinterpretations of foundational ideas and
conceptions in the present. Discussion and debate will be
configured around four main thematic clusters. Each cluster
will combine discussions and workshops, designed to engage
ongoing scholarship by participants who work in that field.
Participants will present their own work, in the form of
written papers, visual presentations, creative projects, or
performance pieces where applicable, and will receive
comments both from their peers and from leading scholars in
their field.

"Theories from the Global South" will examine four critical
traditions: Subaltern Studies; black radical anti-colonial
thought; post-colonial theory; and theories about the
coloniality of power and knowledge. Rather than view these
theoretical formulations as coherent systems, this cluster
will consider how these bodies of thought have been in
dialogue with critical traditions from elsewhere, while
simultaneously asking questions specifically addressed to
their places of origin. It will consider how various
thinkers have staked out and contested different positions,
in order to probe questions that are unique to the human
experiences of the Global South. This cluster will explore
which theoretical positions remain vital and useful, and
which may have exhausted themselves in the contemporary
moment. It will then ask which new genealogies of theory
best articulate and facilitate analysis, interpretation and
conceptualization of today’s world, while establishing
connections between discursive and conceptual fields.

"Theorizing Violence" will look at how different disciplines
and intellectual traditions have framed and interpreted
violence, and how they have interrogated the relationship
between the articulation of violence and structural
injustices. Faculty will explore how violence has been
'disciplined' in different ways in relation to different
scripts of political life, different political-economies of
rationality and irrationality, different theories of
continuity and social change and different technologies of
governance and subjectivity. This will also be necessarily
an interrogation of how the 'effects' of violence are
described, assessed and complicated in competing narratives
of victimization and redemption, and the stakes they carry
for how struggles over resources and meanings are
legitimized and contested.

"Opening Up Epistemes" will focus on indigenous knowledge
systems and the productive tensions that emerge from the
imbrications of different knowledge traditions. This cluster
will explore some of the spaces, both conceptual and
performative, where two "epistemological meta-catetories" -
global sciences and local indigenous knowledge systems -
increasingly interact, especially in the realms of the life
sciences, design and new media. Central to this exploration
will be critical reflections on some of the key concepts,
discourses and practices from multiple knowledge traditions,
through an open-ended dialogue between participants and
reflective practitioners, as well as academic experts.

"Trauma, History, Memory and Democracy" will pose a set of
profound political questions about what democracy means and
looks like in places where historical injustices continue to
leave marks and social legacies. This cluster will focus on
the institutional dimensions of those questions, reflecting
on the roles and limits of formal political equality and
representative liberal institutions, as well as alternative
institutional frameworks for mediating claims to
representation and justice. It will also look at the ways in
which we have come to talk and think about politics and
democracy in the contemporary world, grappling with new
political obligations, as well as new political communities,
that emerge from historical memories of trauma. What this
all means for conceptions of citizenship, national identity,
freedom and sovereignty are further issues to be explored.

Online information:
http://brown.edu/Administration/International_Affairs/initiative/globalhumanities.html


Contact:

Prof. Anthony Bogues
Brown International Advanced Research Institutes (BIARI)
Brown University
111 Thayer Street, Box 1919
Providence, RI 02912
USA
Tel: +1 401 863 3969
Fax: +1 401 863 6725
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.brown.edu/biari

 
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