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Call for Papers

Theme: Heidegger in the Islamicate World
Type: International Conference
Institution: Institute of Islamic Studies and New Oriental Philology,
University of Bern
Location: Bern (Switzerland)
Date: 2.–4.11.2016
Deadline: 30.6.2016

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One of the intellectual traditions profoundly influenced by
Heidegger’s (1889-1976) thought is the Islamicate world.
Intellectuals here started to deal with Heidegger’s philosophy as
early as the 1940s. Involvement with Heidegger’s intellectual oeuvre
manifests itself in multiple aspects and at various levels: Besides
the rather scholarly interests of reading, translating, and teaching
Heidegger’s philosophy, his thought is valued as a possible means to
recontextualise what thinkers in the Islamicate world define as
‘their’ intellectual tradition, often including religion, as a
meaningful manifestation of a metahistorical dimension of human
being. The interest in the work of this particular thinker appears to
be grounded in the conviction that the position it takes towards the
conventions of intellectual tradition contributes to overcoming the
aporias inherent in them. Thus, in the Islamicate world, dealing with
Heidegger is often part of a project reaching far beyond the strictly
academic sphere. To what extent Heidegger’s National Socialism and
anti-Semitism play a part in all this is a question deserving
scholarly debate.

Among the Arabic scholars, Abdurrahman Badawi (Cairo, 1917-2002) is
the first to extensively work and write on Heidegger treating his
philosophy within his discussion of various strands of existential
philosophy (1945, 1962, 1984). The first scholarly Arabic translation
of Heidegger’s texts (1964) is also linked to Badawi’s name, who
encouraged and supervised his pupils Fuʾād Kāmil and Maḥmūd Raǧab in
this venture. Arabic reception of Heidegger’s philosophy later
shifted its core area from Egypt to the Maghreb and holds currently a
stronghold in Morocco and Tunisia. Among the more recent
contributions by Arabic philosophers we may cite Fethi el-Meskini’s
(Tunis) first complete Arabic translation of Time and Being (2014)
and works by Ismail El Mossadeq (Kénitra) (1995, 2003, 2012) and
Mohamed Mahjoub (Tunis) (1983, 1995). In Iran, Heideggerianism starts
in the early 1950s with the contact of the Iranian philosophy scholar
Aḥmad Fardīd (1913-1994) with the French Orientalist and philosopher
Henry Corbin (1903-1978). Corbin applied Heidegger’s hermeneutics and
phenomenology to what he termed the Iranian-Islamic intellectual
tradition in which he sees the manifestation of a timeless wisdom.
The Corbinist type of Orientalism still very much defines the
perception by many Iranians of ‘their’ intellectual history. Iranian
Heideggerianism features some of the most prominent exponents of
intellectual life of the second part of the 20th century such as
Dāryūš Šāyegān (1935-) and Reżā Dāvarī (1934-) and fed into the
intellectual quest for identity that started in the early 1960s.
Similarly, Heidegger’s thought has imprinted philosophy in other
states and regions within the Islamicate world such as Turkey,
Central Asia and Muslim South and Southeast Asia.

Research on the reception of Heidegger in the Islamicate world has
first started in Iran, where the role of Heidegger’s philosophy in
Iranian intellectual history has been reflected as a subject of
scholarly discussion since the 1990s on the part of researchers like
Boroujerdi (1996), Ṣādeqī (2000, 2005), Mirsepassi (2000, 2006, 2011)
and ʿAbdolkarīmī (2013), to mention only a few. Quite contrary is the
case of Arabic philosophy, which up to date doesn’t involve works
dealing with its own reception of Heidegger. Western scholarship on
Heidegger reception in the Islamicate world, for its part, has
started only recently. Among its contributions are the preliminary
articles “La réception arabe de Heidegger” (Kata Moser, 2015) and “To
mean or not to mean? as the underlying question of Western-inspired
counter-Enlightenment discourse in Iran” (Urs Gösken, 2015).

In order to make a contribution to the ongoing research on Heidegger
in the Islamicate world, this conference aspires to bring together
researchers from around the world working on Heidegger reception in
the Islamicate world as well as recipients of Heidegger within the
Islamicate world themselves. The goal of the conference is to deepen,
widen and make known to one another the different methodical and
thematic outlooks, approaches and perspectives on the topic. In the
framework of this goal, the conference attempts to shed light on
questions like the following: How and why did Heidegger’s thought
appear on the intellectual scene of the Islamicate world? What role
does it perform there and what are the interests, intellectual,
ideological, religious etc. in the light of which thinkers in the
Islamicate world deal with this particular philosopher? What are the
points in common and the differences between the various parts of the
Islamicate world with regard to the reception of Heidegger’s thought?
What is the particular role Heidegger’s philosophy plays in the
intellectual life of the Islamicate world in comparison to the
philosophy of other thinkers of Western modernity? What is the
relationship between Heidegger’s thought in the Islamicate world with
its previous intellectual tradition? In the light of these and
related questions, the conference is designed to encourage reflection
on the multiple perspectives of Heidegger’s oeuvre and to elucidate
the significance of Heidegger’s thought for the Islamicate world. We
are already able to proudly announce Professor Ali Mirsepassi (New
York) as one of the keynote speakers on the topic of our conference.

We invite senior researchers and junior scholars working on Heidegger
reception in the Islamicate world as well as recipients of Heidegger
from the Islamicate world to share and reflect perspectives related
to the conference’s topic. Please submit your abstract (no longer
than 500 words) and a short vita to the organizers before 30th June
2016. Successful applicants are expected to submit a full draft paper
by 30th September 2016. Time for presentation at the conference will
be strictly limited to 20 minutes. A publication is planned for early
2017.

For accepted papers:
Accommodation will be provided and economy class travel costs can be
covered up to 1000 Sfr.

Venue of the conference:
University of Bern, Switzerland

Language: English.
Anyone preferring to address the audience in a different language is
kindly requested to communicate this to the conveners as soon as
their abstract has been accepted so as to allow us to provide
translation. Please keep in mind that translation will take up half
of the time allowed for your talk.

Organizers:
Dr. des. Kata Moser (Bern)
Dr. Urs Gösken (Bern)


Contact:

Dr. Kata Moser
Email: [email protected]

Dr. Urs Gösken
Email: [email protected]




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