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Call for Papers

Theme: Modernity Between the Damaged Life and Sane Society
Subtitle: Social Theory in the Age of Urgency
Type: 17th Annual Conference
Institution: International Social Theory Consortium (ISTC)
   Loyola University
Location: Chicago, IL (USA)
Date: 17.–19.5.2018
Deadline: 15.3.2018

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​In the twenty-first century, it is becoming ever more apparent, at
an accelerating pace and in an increasingly aggravating fashion, that
the assumptions that informed social theorists during the second half
of the twentieth century, in the humanities and in the social
sciences, about the principles underlying the modern world and
social, political, and cultural change, are highly problematic. On
the one hand, this clearly is a consequence of exhaustion regarding
the determination in many quarters and among many people after World
War II to prevent another world war. It is undeniable that today, the
inclination that characterized the postwar era, to whatever extent,
to approach areas of conflict in a more conciliatory fashion, is
dissipating quickly. On the other hand, fear of the future is
manifesting itself ever more clearly, and the horizon of excellent
prospects appears to be narrowing precipitously. In this context,
established and prevailing notions regarding progress must be
scrutinized, and their importance and appeal to growing numbers of
people questioned. In 1984, Habermas diagnosed symptoms of an
“exhaustion of utopian energies.” Today, the kind of imaginary
necessary for maintaining commitment (or even the ideations relating)
to what may be referred to as “utopian impulse” is in short supply.
At the same time, both in the natural and social sciences, and in
mass culture generally, visions of dystopic future are proliferating.

Even though the representatives of the Frankfurt School version of
critical theory have been accused of pessimism and a
“deflationary” (disenchanting, sobering) impetus, the motivation
behind both was an undeniable penchant for “inflation” (a determined
commitment to the possibility of the future being better than the
past). In recent renderings of critical theory, both the deflationary
and the inflationary moments have (been) weakened to the point where
the distinction between critical theory and traditional theory is
difficult to discern.

This conference is dedicated to illuminating the larger nexus of
issues surrounding the condition of modernity (and especially
persistent challenges relating to the study and the theory of modern
societies) within the spectrum and the field of tensions between
utopia and dystopia, with a special emphasis on circumstances in the
United States. Theodor W. Adorno’s perspective on the “damaged life”
will serve as a perspective on critical theory that stressed the
importance of “deflation” (as one end of the spectrum), while Erich
Fromm’s concept of the “sane society” will function as what remains
the foremost effort to delineate, in “inflationary” fashion, a
society in which the lives of individuals will not be fraught by the
structural pathologies that have characterized modern societies to
date (as the other end of the spectrum). Adorno and Fromm are
especially well-suited as a frame since their versions of critical
theory would have been inconceivable independently of their “American
experience,” respectively.

The ISTC continues its tradition of openness to papers on all topics
that fall under the heading of social theory, broadly conceived, and
encourages submissions in all areas and traditions of social
theorizing.

​For the 2018 annual conference, we especially encourage submissions
that address the importance of categories and perspectives relating
to issues social theorists must tackle in challenging times.

Possible topics include:

- The Damaged Life in 21st Century Capitalism
- Visions of the Sane Society
- Strategies toward a Sane Society
- Ideology in the 21st Century
- The Eclipse of “Society”
- The Future of Emancipation
- Social Theory between Anthropology and Social Science
- Towards a Symptomology of “Trump”
- Rescuing Critical Theory from its Official Representatives
- Theorizing “Futurity”
- Political Economies of Race, Class, and Gender
- Postcolonial Capitalism and Critique
- Identity Politics and the Destruction of the Self
- Resistance: Necessary but Futile?
- Posthumanism
- Theorizing Utopia/Dystopia
- The End of Progress?
- Revisiting Marx: 200 Years after his Birth
- Postone’s Time, Labor, and Social Domination after 25 Years
- Herbert Marcuse in the 21st Century
- Critical Theory and the Contemporary Self
- Recognition and Redistribution Revisited: Fraser vs. Honneth after
  Trump
- Feminism Today: From #MeToo to All of Us
- The Next Financial Bubble to Burst
- Dow Jones Going up, Society Going Down?
- Authoritarian Populism: Reaction’s Last Stand or Prelude to
  Neofascism?
- Wither Neoliberal Globalization?
- Basic Income: Between Promise and Ideology
- History Going into Reverse?

Please email abstracts and/or session proposals to
[email protected] no later than 15 March 2018.

Organizers

Lauren Langman
Loyola University Chicago
[email protected]

James Block
DePaul University (Chicago)
[email protected]

Harry F. Dahms, Director, ISTC
University of Tennessee-Knoxville
[email protected]

Conference website:
http://socialtheory.org




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