__________________________________________________

Call for Applications

Theme: The Comparative Anthropology of Worlding
Type: Doctoral Workshop with Philippe Descola
Institution: College of Fellows, University of Tübingen
Location: Tübingen (Germany)
Date: 30.5.–3.6.2022
Deadline: 1.3.2022

__________________________________________________


Anthropologist Philippe Descola says of himself that he was
ill-prepared for the field work for which he lived with the Achuar in
Ecuador in the 1980s. Poorly prepared, however, not because of his
own failings, but because of the self-evident way in which he took
for granted the distinction between nature and culture at that time -
a distinction which anthropology has always worked with and which had
hardly ever been seriously questioned until then. The
matter-of-course nature of this distinction, however, not only
prevented (and still prevents) a genuine understanding of societies
such as that of the Achuar, but also suggests a fatal
misunderstanding of these societies. Since nature and culture cannot
be easily separated in their case, they are called “primitive
peoples”, who still remain in the prehistoric and pre-cultural stage
of human development. Descola points out that such a description is
completely mistaken. Instead of being trapped in their immediate
natural environment, the Achuar recognise in most animals and plants
their own personalities with whom they can communicate at least
rudimentarily and whose interests they must respect. The
nature-culture-border does not carry here.

Committed to the descriptive method of anthropology, Descola pleads
to discard any form of ontological preconception when visiting
foreign societies. The different life-worlds are not adequately
understood if they are merely classified as different cultural
interpretations of “the” one nature. Instead, the life-worlds, for
their part, first establish the ontology and thus also the
understanding of man and the world that corresponds to them. Descola
summarizes this with the term “worlding”. He names four different
forms of such worlding: naturalism, animism, totemism, and analogism.
The ontology of naturalism, which is generally assumed by modern
sciences, is on an equal footing with the other forms. Which ontology
is valid is determined by the life-world, but not does a presupposed
ontology give the correct understanding of the life-world.

In political terms, Descola opens up new possibilities for linking
the rights of nature not only to the resource requirements of man.
But how is it possible to give non-humans access to the political
sphere? What does that mean with respect to current debates on
climate change and conservation? A philosophical difficulty that
arises from Descola's work can be summarized in the question of the
possibility of plural ontologies. How do we escape the arbitrariness
of relativism without simply assuming a universalism again?
Furthermore, are there other forms of worlding besides those pointed
out by Descola? Shall we conceive them as four completely separate
categories to describe the continuities and discontinuities between
humans and non-humans? Or are they rather something like Weberian
ideal types – useful for thinking, but hard to turn into iron boxes?

These and other questions we would like to explore in the Workshop.

Organisation

This workshop will enable discussions with Philippe Descola about his
ideas and contributions across several themes. It will be of interest
to participants from a wide range of disciplines. There will be an
opening session on day one. Day two to four will consist of an
initial overview paper by Professor Descola, which is followed by
participant contributions and discussions. The school ends with a
closing session and a wrap-up of topics on day five. Participants are
also invited to attend a public lecture by Philippe Descola during
the week.

Participants must present a 15-minute paper that critically discusses
one of the themes and/or questions of the workshop. Engagement with
current research questions and issues are particularly welcome as
well as connections with current PhD projects.

Application

This workshop is open to doctoral students from all disciplines
(applications of master students will be considered in exceptional
cases).

Applicants should supply the following documents:

- Application form
- CV (2 pages max)
- 300-word expression of interest
- Paper title and 300-word abstract

Applications should be sent until 1 March 2022 the latest to:
i...@cof.uni-tuebingen.de

A letter of admission will reach successful applicants by the end of
March.

There is no program fee.
The CoF will assist participants in finding inexpensive accommodation.

Organization:
Niels Weidtmann, University of Tübingen, Germany

Website of the workshop:
https://uni-tuebingen.de/einrichtungen/zentrale-einrichtungen/college-of-fellows/focus-groups/interdisziplinaere-anthropologie/#c1447785




__________________________________________________


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

InterPhil List Archive:
https://www.mail-archive.com/interphil@list.polylog.org/

__________________________________________________

Reply via email to