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Conference Announcement

"Citizenship: the Self and Political Agency"
Interdisciplinary Conference
Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities
(CRASSH) and Social Anthropology, University of Cambridge
Social Sciences Department, Wageningen University
Cambridge (United Kingdom)
5-6 November 2010

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This conference aims to explore the potential of the recent
flourishing of anthropological work on citizenship, both in its own
right and as a contribution to political, sociological and
philosophical discussions of the concept. By gathering together
papers from leading anthropologists of citizenship the conference
aims to assess the current state of play in the field, encourage
interdisciplinary debate, and provide the space to explore
collectively ways to move our discussions of citizenship forward. As
a focal theme, we propose to consider what a peculiarly
anthropological approach to citizenship brings to our understanding
of the relationship between political claims-making and the formation
of subjectivity and agency.

A coherent body of anthropological work explicitly on the theme of
citizenship can be said to have coalesced now. Anthropological
analyses lead us to view citizenship as a set of practices especially
related to participating in politics, and ethnographic focus on
political claims-making as a practice of citizenship (e.g. Holston,
Petryna) has yielded crucial insights into the relationship between
people and the state, and between people and the law.

Now, ‘citizenship’ almost inevitably has a set of adjectives
preceding it: biological (Petryna, Rose and Novas), pharmaceutical
(Ecks), rural, differentiated, formal/substantive, insurgent
(Holston), flexible (Ong), cosmopolitan, and so on. What the
proliferation of adjectives indicates is the recognition of the
contingencies of political membership, and of the nature of
citizenship as a mechanism for making claims upon different kinds of
political communities, in particular the state. Anthropologists have
also questioned the assumption that the primary political community
operates at the national level, with discussions of global,
transnational or cosmopolitan citizenship (Ong) and local, city-based
formulations (Holston, Lazar).

The citizenship agenda has also been embraced by a wide range of
policy-making institutions, from national governments to NGOs and the
World Bank. In these policies the (target) population is now expected
to behave as worthy citizens who take an active part in democratic
governance through a variety of pre-defined models and participatory
procedures. Yet, the target population often feels completely
alienated from these externally imposed citizenship projects (Lazar).
Thus, creating a gap between citizenship projects from above and
people’s actual experience of their citizenship. Accordingly, the
conference also looks into the political use of the citizenship
agenda.

So, at this important conjuncture in the development of an
anthropology of citizenship, this conference seeks to take stock and
ask where might anthropological study of citizenship take us from
here?

One possibility that the conference aims to explore is the experience
of citizenship as about the formation of subjectivities and senses of
self, and here anthropology might profit from interdisciplinary
engagement with psychoanalysis and psychology. We know that struggles
of political claims-making tend to change people’s own sense of their
political agency – as they assume the identity of a person with the
right to have rights (Arendt). Therefore, studying citizenship
ethnographically can also explore exactly how political
subjectivities are produced in the interaction between state and
non-state actors and histories. That in turn requires a consideration
of notions of the self operating in a given sphere, which should then
feed back into understandings of and assumptions about the self
within political theory of citizenship. Liberal citizenship theory
presupposes a particular form of subjectivity for those subject to
liberal political structures, that of the abstracted, autonomous
(implicitly male) Rawlsian individual. The challenge, one that
anthropologists are peculiarly well-placed to answer, is how to speak
of the relationship between individual and collectivity without
invoking a similarly possessive and individual model of the person
(the ‘encumbered self’ – MacIntyre) as owner of responsibilities
instead of rights.

Thus the conference hopes to promote interdisciplinary conversations
between anthropologists, political theorists and others in order to
examine the relationship between citizenship and subjectivity. As
such it expects to draw on recent developments in the anthropology of
politics, of affect and of the state, and to contribute something new
and particularly anthropological to the political theory of
citizenship.


Contact:

Anna Malinowska, Conference Programme Manager
Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities
University of Cambridge
17 Mill Lane
Cambridge, CB2 1RX
United Kingdom
Tel: +44 1223 760487
Fax: +44 1223 315794
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.crassh.cam.ac.uk/events/1239/
 
 
 
 
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