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Call for Papers

Theme: Language, Expression, Aesthetics 
Type: 2019 Graduate Conference
Institution: Ryerson Philosophy Graduate Students' Union, Ryerson
University
Location: Toronto, ON (Canada)
Date: 22.–23.3.2019
Deadline: 14.12.2018

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Ryerson University is now accepting papers for its 2019 Graduate
Conference “Language, Expression, Aesthetics”. The purpose of the
conference is to explore the relation between philosophy of language
and philosophy of art.

The linguistic turn in twentieth century philosophy was the attempt
to solve philosophical problems by attaining a clearer view about the
language that we use and how it works. It is in this context that
Michael Dummett has maintained that “the philosophy of language is
first philosophy”. Other trends in philosophy put the very status of
language itself in question. Donald Davidson for one has
provocatively claimed that “there is no such thing as language, not
if a language is anything like what many philosophers and linguists
have supposed”. Further developments in the continental tradition
have also complicated the matter. Jacques Derrida famously claimed
that “there is no outside-text,” while Martin Heidegger, in his later
stages, argued that the study of metaphysics is inextricably bound to
the history of the West, which has itself culminated in a cultural
nihilism that leads him to conclude that philosophy itself should
give way to a thinking that seems to be largely be informed by an
understanding of poetry. 

There are of course other trends and arguments but it is in the
context of these problems that this conference seeks to address the
following question: how do concerns about the status of language and
status of art inform each other?

Possible topics for papers include but are not limited to:

- How do the cultural norms that shape language influence art?
- Can the explanatory entities picked out by the philosophy of
  language help explain artistic phenomenon? Or vice versa
- Can philosophical questions of art be reduced to questions about
  language?
- Does art or philosophy have a privileged relationship to the
  “nature” of things?
- Can language accurately “picture” experience?
- Can language go beyond expressing cognitive content?
- Can all experiences be expressed in words? Or is there an
  ineffability to experience?
- Must language be verbal or linguistic? What kinds of possibilities
  are there for “non-verbal” and non-linguistic approaches to art?
- What is the “language of cinema” and how might it be understood?
- What is the correlation between art and subversive expression?
- To what extent do developments in literature problematize the
  philosophy of language?

Confirmed keynote speakers:

Dr. Brendan Moran (University of Calgary)
Dr. Tim Sundell (University of Auburn)
Dr. Don Beith (University of Maine)
Dr. Jim Vernon (York University)

Please email submissions to ​[email protected]​. The deadline for
submissions is December 14th, 2018. Papers should be presentable in
20-25 minutes (around 3000 words), to be followed by a question
period. With your submissions, please include a cover page that
includes your name, affiliated institution, contact information,
title, and a 200-300 word abstract.


Contact:

Mitchell Wideman, Conference Coordinator
Ryerson Philosophy Graduate Students' Union
Email: [email protected]
Web: https://rpgsu.com/home/conference/




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