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Call for Papers

Theme: Thinking Beyond Capitalism
Type: International Conference
Institution: Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory,
University of Belgrade
Location: Belgrade (Serbia)
Date: 24.–26.6.2015
Deadline: 10.4.2015

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How is it at all possible to make sound statements about contemporary
capitalism? How does one adequately diagnose the current state of the
economy? Clearly there is no consensus whether the financial crisis
which culminated in 2007-2008 should be seen as a symptom of the
structural crisis of neoliberal capitalism only, or of capitalism in
general. Moreover, one should keep in mind that the term ’crisis’ is
itself laden with different ideologems. The talk of ’crisis’ implies
the existence of a superior prior state of capitalism, free of any
crisis, and that we are now witnessing an extraordinary phase which
is alien to the ’normal functioning’ of the system. Should we
understand the crisis merely as the means for restructuring the
existing system, or as the beginning of an irreversible demise of the
current mode of production? Is it possible that the crisis has
actually enabled the exacom preservation of the status quo, and has
prevented any change? Or was the crisis, on the contrary, the crucial
catalyst for the politicization of the otherwise depoliticized actors
within late capitalism? We are thus simultaneously exposed to various
institutional-reformist suggestions, more or less grounded apologias,
and identifications of fundamental contradictions within the
capitalist reproduction process.

In The Communist Manifesto Marx argues that capitalism is a social
order which arises and subsists in the form of a critique of all
alternative orders and subjective dispositions. Capitalism has proven
more radical than its competitors: it has destroyed the ancien
régime, has rendered all societal bonds flexible and has constantly
revolutionized the means of production. It is a system in which ’all
that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned’. To what
extent, then, is it even possible to formulate a critique of such
societal system, a system that has managed to incorporate critique
itself? Can one stage a revolution against the ’revolution’ itself?
If capitalism thus emerges as the actual constitutive framework of
our thought, how do we begin to think beyond capitalism? Starting
from the assumption that crises are in fact situations which open up
space for thought rather than obstruct it, we intend to thematize the
following spectrum of problems: 

- Difficulties regarding the self-valorization of capital
- Inequalities within the global division of labour and the
  challenges of (re)distribution
- Reproduction of social classes and forms of domination
- Structural unemployment and the growth of the precariat
- Tensions between market imperatives
- Ideologems of management, esprit d’enterprise...
- The transformed property relations characterizing ’non-material
  goods’
- Geographical aspects of capitalism (territories, borders, etc.)
- Tensions between the centres, semiperipheries and peripheries of
  capitalism
- Dangers of climate change
- Competing dimensions of normativity (universal, global, particular,
  local, singular...)
- Democracies versus authoritarian social orders
- The cultural dimensions of neoliberalism
- Critique of ideology, critical discourse analysis of neoliberalism
- Neoliberal patriarchy and the new feminisms
- The rise and evolution of anti-neoliberal / anti-capitalist
  movements
- Left, right, and Romanticist anti-capitalism
- Alternative modes of production of social life today

Organization of the conference

The conference is organized by the Group for the Study of Social
Engagement, part of the Institute for Philosophy and Social Theory in
Belgrade, with the support of the Serbian Ministry of Education,
Science and Technological Development, Centre for Advanced Studies in
Rijeka, Croatia, the Centre for Ethics, Law and Applied Philosophy in
Belgrade, and the French Institute in Serbia. The official language
of the conference is English.

Presentations should not exceed 20 minutes.

The Program Committee of the conference will select the presenters
based on the submitted abstracts. The book of abstracts will be
published by the time of the conference. Conference applications
should be sent only via e-mail to the following address:
[email protected]
We kindly ask you to put in your email subject the following title:
’Application: title of the paper’. The complete application in
the .doc, .docx or .pdf format must contain: the title of the
presentation, an abstract of up to 200 words and a short biography,
in English.

There will be no registration fees. Conference organisers will
provide lunch and light refreshments during the conference program.
Participants are kindly requested to make their own accommodation and
travel arrangements.

Important dates

Application deadline: 10 April 2015
Notification of acceptance: 25 April 2015
Conference dates: 24–26 June 2015

Conference website:
http://instifdt.bg.ac.rs/conference_capitalism.html




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