__________________________________________________

Conference Announcement

Theme: Figures of the o/Other
Subtitle: Brother, Neighbour, Stranger, Enemy
Type: Spring Seminars 2016
Institution: Genoa School of Humanities (GSH)
Location: Genoa (Italy)
Date: 4.–9.4.2016

__________________________________________________


Established in 2013 and directed by Lorenzo Chiesa and Raffaello
Palumbo Mosca, the Genoa School of Humanities (GSH) offers weekly
series of seminars held by scholars of literature, philosophy, and
other subjects, as well as by novelists, filmmakers and
psychoanalysts.

In the seminars of Spring 2016 we will focus on the question of
otherness from the standpoints of psychoanalysis, fiction writing,
literary criticism, philosophy, and political theory. 

Christianity preaches the love of the neighbour, yet ultimately
reduces him to a repetition of the self. Modern democracy rests on
fraternity, but all too often distorts it into inconsistent
ideologies of identity, which pave the way for more or less explicit
forms of racism. The battle for the emancipation of woman runs itself
the risk of succumbing to a global dispositif of sameness dominated
by Capital and its ruthless values. Faced with unprecedented social,
economical, and political crises, we are today increasingly urged to
treat any kind of otherness that challenges our fragile egos as an
enemy. 

This series of seminars aims at countering such a desolate scenario
by thinking alternative figures of the other through topical
interventions in the fields of psychoanalysis, literature,
philosophy, and political theory. Our basic hypothesis is that there
can be no sincere appreciation of the other as another subject
without acknowledging a more profound, albeit immanent, kind of
Other: the linguistic/discursive nature of the animal that speaks and
writes; its structural incompleteness and parallel desire for
completeness. 

Each character in a novel is a language construction but also a
concrete figure of the other conveying a story and a singular
worldview, which thus continuously tests ours as readers. Starting at
least from Stavrogin in Dostoevsky’s Demons, narrative writing also
often presents us with monstrous characters with which we are
nonetheless asked to empathize. How should we treat them? Can the
encounter with these figures of radical otherness constructively
reshape our own political and ethical views, and, if so, in what
ways? 

A long philosophical tradition including thinkers such as Hegel,
Marx, and Sartre has insisted on the theoretical and empirical nexus
between alterity and politics, focusing in particular on its
agonistic status. What is today the legacy of this tradition? By way
of example: how does it help us to account for the ever more evident
short-circuit between fraternity and terror? 

Freudian and Lacanian psychoanalysis too deems alienation in the
image and speech of the other to be a basic presupposition of our
sexual identification and subjectivity in general. Feelings of love
and hatred follow in an entanglement that is difficult to unravel. If
aggressiveness and altruism are nothing but two sides of the same
coin, is it possible to discern a kernel of otherness that suspends
their dialectic? In what sense can we say that woman partly embodies
this Other? And also, how can such a psychoanalytical approach to the
o/Other contribute to a renewal of socio-political analysis?

The GSH proposes itself as a venue where young scholars have a real
possibility to deepen their knowledge, not only by attending
seminars, but also by actively discussing in an informal context
their own research projects with highly qualified teachers and among
themselves. One of the basic ideas of the GSH is that learning is
enhanced by the suspension of formalisms, hierarchies, and the
principle of authority that usually define traditional academic
contexts. Each day revolves around one or two presentations by an
invited speaker and is enriched by roundtables, small study groups,
and debates that are always attended by one or more seminar leaders.
The exchange of knowledge and ideas is facilitated by the limited
number of students, and by the interdisciplinary nature of the
seminars.

Speakers/seminar leaders at the GSH are leading international figures
in their academic and extra-academic fields. They are based both in
Italy and abroad. Participants are thus exposed to different
cultures, teaching methods, and disciplinary perspectives. They are
also enabled to establish new research networks and acquire practical
information on how to access PhD and post-doctoral programmes.

Organizers

Lorenzo Chiesa
Raffaello Palumbo Mosca

Speakers

Sergio Benvenuto
Giorgio Cesarale
Lorenzo Chiesa
Raffaello Palumbo Mosca
Andrea Tarabbia
Davide Tarizzo

Venue

Seminars are held in Genoa, Via Parini 10.
From Genova Brignole railway station take bus number 43 toward Nervi.
Get off in Via Albaro; cross Piazza Leopardi and you reach Via Parini.

Registration Fees

6 days of seminars: €300
4 days of seminars: €200
2 days of seminars: €100

Programme

Monday, 4 April

10:00
Welcome and introduction to the Spring 2016 seminar series (Raffaello
Palumbo Mosca & Lorenzo Chiesa)

10:30
“Storie di anime sbagliate” (Andrea Tarabbia)
[seminar in Italian]

12:00
Q&A / Discussion

15:00
Roundtable on Andrea Tarabbia’s seminar and the question of alterity
in fiction writing (Chair: Raffaello Palumbo Mosca)

17:00
Drinks and nibbles

Tuesday, 5 April

10:30
“The Other in contemporary literature. New Perspectives“ (Raffaello
Palumbo Mosca) [seminar in English]

12:00
Q&A / Discussion

15:00
“Fraternity/Terror: Hegel, Sartre, Žižek” (Giorgio Cesarale)
[seminar in English]

16:30
Q&A / Discussion

17:00
Roundtable on Raffaello Palumbo Mosca’s and Giorgio Cesarale’s
seminars (Chair: Lorenzo Chiesa)

Wednesday, 6 April

10:30
“Aggressiveness I: From the Mirror-Stage to Geopolitics” (Lorenzo
Chiesa) [seminar in English]
 
12:00
Q&A /Discussion

15:00
Roundtable on Lorenzo Chiesa’s seminar
(Chair: Davide Tarizzo)

Thursday, 7 April

10:30
“Who do you think you are? Lacan, Politics, Antagonism” (Davide
Tarizzo) [seminar in English]

12:00
Q&A / Discussion

15:00
Roundtable on Davide Tarizzo’s seminar
(Chair: Lorenzo Chiesa)

Friday, 8 April

10:30
“Other than brother-neighbour-stranger-enemy” (Sergio Benvenuto)
[seminar in English]

12:00
Q&A / Discussion

15:00
Roundtable on Sergio Benvenuto’s seminar
(Chair: Raffaello Palumbo Mosca)

Saturday, 9 April

10:30
“Aggressiveness II: Ambivalence, Jealousy, Destruction” (Lorenzo
Chiesa) [seminar in English]

12:00
Q&A / Discussion

15:00
Roundtable: “Which o/Other? Psychoanalysis between the Clinical and
the Political”

17:00
Drinks and nibbles

More Information:
[email protected]

Raffaello Palumbo Mosca
[email protected]

Lorenzo Chiesa
[email protected]

Seminars website:
http://www.gsh-education.com/seminars-spring-2016/




__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://cal.polylog.org

__________________________________________________

 

Reply via email to