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Conference Announcement

Theme: Deorientalizing Citizenship?
Subtitle: Experiments in Political Subjectivity
Type: 2nd International Symposium
Institution: Oecumene: Citizenship after Orientalism Research
Project, Open University
   Goodenough College
Location: London (United Kingdom)
Date: 12.–13.11.2012

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Our Second Symposium 'Deorientalizing citizenship? Experiments in
political subjectivity' will take place on 12-13 November 2012 at the
Goodenough College in London. The symposium is organised by the
Oecumene: Citizenship after orientalism research project.

The possibility of conceiving practices of citizenship after
orientalism points to experiments that uncover, rearticulate and
provoke subjugated forms of politics. Through addressing the
intersections between orientalism, colonialism and citizenship (panel
1), exploring possibilities of democratic politics for decolonizing
citizenship (panel 2) and troubling universal claims to rights (panel
3), we ask what images of citizenship are emerging in relation to the
process of deorientalization? It is this experimentation itself,
rather than its outcomes, that constitutes 'citizenship after
orientalism' as a field of investigation.

Keynote speakers

Walter Mignolo (Duke University)
Citizenship, Knowledge and the Limits of Humanity (II)

Saba Mahmood (University of California, Berkeley)
Religious Difference and the Minority Problem in Contemporary Law

Registration

The £30 registration fee covers attendance on 12 and 13 November 2012
and includes conference materials, lunches, refreshments and evening
reception on the first day.

Discussions

Thinking about 'citizenship after orientalism' involves addressing
two theoretical issues. Firstly, what do we understand by orientalism
thirty years after Edward Said's seminal investigation? How can
orientalism be re-articulated beyond its cultural or representational
forms? Secondly, what do we mean by citizenship as a possible mode of
political subjectivity? Is any articulation of political subjectivity
which enacts a claim to rights, or to the right to claim rights, to
be understood as citizenship? Keynote speakers Saba Mahmood and
Walter Mignolo together with a selection of panellists will address
these questions from multi-disciplinary perspectives.

Panel 1:
Citizenship, colonialism, orientalism

Speakers: Sukanya Banerjee (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee), Piyel
Haldar (Birkbeck), Jack Harrington (The Open University), Meyda
Yeğenoğlu (Istanbul Bilgi Üniversitesi).

This panel traces the relations and tensions between Western colonial
enterprises, orientalism and the institution of citizenship. Though
intertwined in complex ways, these tensions are also distinct. How
can these strands be pulled apart in order to understand how they
have operated and continue to operate singly and together? How have
colonial dominations and Empires acted upon the particular
configuration of political subjectivity called citizenship and how do
they continue to do so?

The panel aims to address the following questions: Is 'political
orientalism' different from other forms of orientalism? If so, in
what ways? Was orientalism a disposit if at play in the establishment
of law as the language of state authority? How can we think of
orientalism and colonialism in relation to the way in which the
'global south' is currently constructed? How do we investigate their
traces in citizenship practices today?

Panel 2:
Democratizing politics, decolonizing citizenship

Speakers: Bela Bhatia (Tata Institute of Social Sciences), Charles
Hirschkind (UC Berkeley), Sasha Roseneil (Birkbeck).

Having questioned the institution of citizenship as euro-centric and
inherited from colonialism, the panel asks what images of the citizen
might emerge if we think about democratic politics 'after
orientalism'. From the postcolonial nationalist struggles to
anti-globalization resistances, from the uprisings in North Africa
and the Middle East to the 'Occupy movements', what democratic
demands are advocated and circulate as forms of resistance against
states and supranational powers? How does the signifier 'democratic'
operate differently in different contexts? Can it question what is
conceived as 'political'?

Departing from these interrogations, how can we think of alternative
subjectivities (plural, communal, religious, intimate, etc) and
informal political actors (non-elected representatives, religious
leaders, big men, private armies, vigilantism, local fixers, etc)
operating in postcolonial societies?

Panel 3:
The universal after orientalism

Speakers: Gurminder Bhambra (Warwick), Sudeep Dasgupta (University of
Amsterdam), Antke Engel (Institute for Queer Theory), Kate Nash
(Goldsmiths).

The access to citizenship of 'former' colonial, sexual, religious,
racial, indigenous others (who became rights-bearing subjects in that
process) and the expansion of rights has promoted a potential
universalisation of citizenship. Despite the critique of universalism
made from multiculturalist, pluralist and feminist perspectives, the
tension with regards to the horizon of universalised rights survives.
To what extent have the universalist assumptions about the subject of
politics, merely understood as a human subject of rights, limited the
scope of politics to an euro-centric view?

This panel discusses alterity as a condition of citizenship in ways
that question universalist ideals. It brings together speakers whose
work troubles the distinction between the human and the citizen and
interrogates the scope of the universal in relation to forms of
political subjectivation.

Further event information

A limited number of bursaries to facilitate attendance at the event
are available. If you have any further queries please contact us via:
[email protected]

The Symposium is organised by the European Research Council funded
project Oecumene: Citizenship after orientalism based at The Open
University, which will offer a series of symposiums. Each symposium
will focus on specific aspects connected with reconsidering
citizenship beyond Eurocentrism.


Contact:

Brigid Vigrass, Project Administrator
Oecumene Project
Faculty of Social Sciences
The Open University
Walton Hall
Milton Keynes, MK7 6AA
United Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0)1908 659958
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.oecumene.eu/events/2nd-symposium




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