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Call for Papers

Theme: Of Cosmopolitanism and Cosmologies
Type: 2nd Joint Biennial CASA–SASA Conference
Institution: Czech Association for Social Anthropology (CASA)
   Slovak Association of Social Anthropologists (SASA)
   Masaryk University
Location: Telč (Czech Republic)
Date: 2.–3.9.2011
Deadline: 8.7.2011

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The subject of cosmopolitanism has lately received particular
attention in the social sciences. A moral and political need to
theorize the complex ways in which it is possible to tackle local and
supra-local loyalties has inspired much of this scholarly debate.
While we should not overlook the underlying political urgency –
captured by Ulrich Beck’s question, “how ought societies to handle
‘otherness’ and ‘boundaries’ during the present crisis of global
interdependency?” – the interest in the basic assumption of the
possibility of “openness to the world and to the other” as an ethical
stance or a way of life has a special anthropological bearing.

There are two grounds on which anthropology engages with the subject
of cosmopolitanism. The first relates to anthropology per se, to its
outlook and positioning as a way of knowing. It is believed that
ethnographic practice presumes cosmopolitan perceptual abilities.
However in the special issue of SA (2010/4) on “cosmopolitan
anthropology” the editor points out that whereas anthropologists have
traditionally valued their methods for receptiveness to various
experiences and cultural pluralism, they have usually been less
prepared to construe these qualities in their research subjects. It
follows that to accomplish anthropology as a cosmopolitan practice,
it is necessary to reconsider our methods of inquiry in a way that
grants our research partners equal capacity of relating to
differences not as definite but strategic, of being ethnographers in
their way. The second ground concerns more directly social theory as
it emerges from within anthropology. After substantial criticism was
levelled against various analytic categories of commonality, which
undermined their universal aspirations, the question of how to
theorize ontologies of sociality as they materialize in various
cosmologies still lingers. On the one hand we are proposed a
plurality of cosmopolitanisms (rooted cosmopolitanism, vernacular
cosmopolitanism, Asian and African cosmopolitanism), while on the
other there are discussions of cosmopolitanism that reach beyond the
normative definition and mark new directions of exploration. They
range from questioning the adequacy of the cosmopolitan approach as
an alternative to other ontologies of the social (Bruno Latour) to
detecting a latent and implicit controversy over the meaning of
subjectivity in the humanities (Huon Wardle).

For this conference we propose to start from the basic assumption
that cosmopolitanism could be approached as an existing mode of
existence shifting in nature and effect with the complex social,
political and cultural relations in which it is embedded. As such it
can be investigated independently though not necessarily regardless
of reference to philosophical conceptions. If cosmopolitanism is born
of a negotiation with otherness, what are the templates around which
ontologies of sociality arise? The question seems to us even more
pertinent in view of the development of our discipline in Central and
Eastern Europe. The anthropological production that issues from the
region is marked by an attention to social cleavages and boundaries
and theorization thereof. We believe it is time to start looking
beyond this paradigm.

The organizers of the 2nd biennial conference of the Czech
Association for Social Anthropology (CASA) and the Slovak Association
of Social Anthropologists (SASA) invite scholars and students of
social anthropology and related disciplines to address the following
questions and to develop their own themes for panels focusing
directly or indirectly on the anthropological investigation of
cosmopolitanism, understood most broadly as an historically, socially
or culturally situated phenomenon:

- The narrative of internationalism during socialism operated
  sometimes explicitly in opposition to cosmopolitanism. What is the
  plight of this narrative after 1990?
- Conceptions of self and “other” are often revealed in relation to
  cosmological settings. What are the current ontologies of self and
  other in post-socialist Europe?
- The ´culturalization of poverty´ could be seen as a new millennial
  narrative. How can we read this global escape to culture against
  existing social inequalities?
- Kant linked cosmopolitanism to the principle of universal
  hospitality. What could be made of that link if we take into account
  the renewed interest of anthropology in hospitality?
- Do new religious movements influencing various marginal groups in
  CEE reveal any cosmopolitan ethos?
- In the increasingly interconnected and complex world new
  cosmo-political alliances and identities have been forming across
  social and environmental movements (around issues such as global
  poverty, climate justice, agriculture etc.). How are the local and
  trans-local loyalties and stakes played out in these movements?

Organisation:
This two-day conference will consist of one plenary session focused
on the central theme followed by parallel panels on various themes.

The keynote speakers will be: Huon Wardle (University of St. Andrews)
and Jonathan Friedman (EHESS and University of California in San
Diego).

The language of the plenary session is English. The languages of the
panel sessions are English, Slovak, and Czech. However, we will adopt
the rule that if one paper accepted to a given panel is in English,
all panel papers will have to be in English.

Important deadlines:
Paper proposals should be sent via email by July 8, 2011.
If you are interested in organizing panel sessions dedicated to a
particular topic, you should send panel proposals, names of proposed
participants and abstracts by July 8, 2011. Abstracts should not
exceed 300 words. Individual applicants will be informed about the
outcome of their paper proposal by July 22, 2011. All proposals as
well as organizational inquiries shall be sent to
<[email protected]>. The final conference program with titles and
abstracts of panel sessions will be announced via email during August
2011.

Venue:
The conference will take place in the south Bohemian town of Telč at
the Masaryk University learning centre situated in the former
Jesuit’s college (http://www.muni.cz/uct/general/about). The premises
offer conference rooms (a lecture hall for the plenary session and
graduate student conference and seminar rooms for panel sessions, all
equipped with conference technology and access to internet) as well
as reasonably priced accommodation for participants
(300CZK/person/night) in 3-5 bed rooms. Please visit
http://www.muni.cz/uct/services/accomm for more details. We have
booked enough rooms (70 places) for all participants.

The conference fee of 600 CZK (25 Euros) covers the costs of the
two-day conference and a dinner on the second day of conference for
each participant. It is payable upon registration at the conference
venue.

The conference preparation committee:
Yasar Abu Ghosh, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic and CASA
David Kocman, University of Kent, UK and CASA
Luděk Brož, Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, Halle,
Germany and CASA Juraj Buzalka, Comenius University, Bratislava,
Slovakia and SASA Martin Kanovský, Comenius University, Bratislava,
Slovakia and SASA

Administration and liaison: Zuzana Schreiberová
([email protected])


Contact:

Yasar Abu Ghosh, PhD
Department of Anthropology
Faculty of Humanities
Charles University in Prague
Husníkova 2075
158 00 Prague 13
Tel: +420 251 620283
Email: [email protected]
 
 
 
 
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