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Call for Papers

Theme: Words that Kill
Type: International Conference
Institution: George and Irina Schaeffer Center for the Study of
Genocide, Human Rights and Conflict Prevention, American University
of Paris
Location: Paris (France)
Date: 28.–30.5.2018
Deadline: 15.10.2017

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There is a continuum linking symbolic violence (in images, signs,
stories) and physical violence. Social violence is bred by the
construction of otherness, the mobilization of myth (purity of
origins), the use of libel, falsehoods and mistruths--performative
acts that foment hate and generate the conditions of possibility of
mass violence. They are common elements of strategic propaganda to
scapegoat, contaminate, exclude, and dehumanize targeted groups,
preconditions for discrimination, repression, mass violence or
genocide. Mass violence requires narratives authorizing killing,
words that not only distance perpetrators from their involvement but
also rationalize and naturalize injustices, normalize crimes and, in
the aftermath, erase them from social memory.

In our current troubled historical moment, where toxic discourses are
being mobilized for political ends, there is growing concern and
debate over the perilous effects of post-truth regimes, false news
and lying in politics. The phenomenon is not new: As Hannah Arendt
notes in Lying in Politics, penned after the publication of the
Pentagon Papers, “Secrecy…and deception, the deliberate falsehood and
the outright lie used as a legitimate means to achieve politics ends,
have been with us since the beginning of recorded history.” But it
has become increasingly acute, affecting and poisoning political
discourse and daily social intercourse.

The aim of the international conference Words that Kill organized by
the George and Irina Schaeffer Center for the Study of Genocide,
Human Rights and Conflict Prevention is to reexamine the questions of
hate speech and freedom, the production and circulation of lies, and
violence-inducing identity discourses. Through interdisciplinary
investigation and critique, we aspire to foster intellectual and
policy responses to injustice, exclusion, and violence.

We welcome innovative scholarly contributions that examine the
multiple dimensions of the problem of hate, the production of
otherness, violence and images, language, media and narratives.

Potential topics include:

* Truth, Lies and the Manufacturing of Otherness

- The epistemological problem: distinguishing truth and lies, facts
  from falsehood
- Uses and misuses of history: mythmaking and mass violence
- Discourses of hate and hate speech
- Cross-national approaches to free speech and hate speech
- The manipulation of “fact” in hate speech
- Manufacturing otherness in narratives, images and language
- False science and scientism as justification for violence

* Mediating Hate

- The production, circulation and reception of dehumanizing
  representations and falsehoods
- Media (new and old), lies, violence and hate
- The power of images
- Virality
- Strategies to counter or control lies and hate speech
- Performance and truth

* Inciting and Denying

- Propaganda as incitement to mass violence
- Conspiracy theories and rumor as incitement to violence
- Genocide denial and revisionism: production and reception
- Commemoration practices: truth and fiction

Confirmed Keynote Speakers:
Sarah Banet-Weiser (University of Southern California)
Susan Benesch (Harvard University)
Gérald Bronner (Paris Diderot)
Marc Crépon (CNRS-École Normale Supérieure)
Jayson Harsin (American University of Paris)
Jason Stanley (Yale University)

Organizing Committee:
Waddick Doyle (AUP), Oliver Feltham (AUP), Philip Golub (AUP), Cary
Hollinshead-Strick (AUP), Jayson Harsin (AUP), Constance Pâris de
Bollardière (AUP), Susan Perry (AUP), Claudia Roda (AUP), Brian
Schiff (AUP) and Miranda Spieler (AUP)

Papers can be given in English or French. Fellowships will be awarded
on the basis of financial need and quality of the scholarly
contribution.

Proposals for presentations must include an abstract (no more than
500 words) and a short biography (no more than 250 words).


Important Dates:

October 15th 2017: Proposals are due.
December 15th 2017: Letters of acceptance are returned.
January 15th 2018: Registration for the conference
opens.                          

For questions about the conference, please contact us at:
[email protected]




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