__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Anatomies of Grief
Subtitle: Conversations on an Ethics of Living
Type: Online Symposium
Institution: Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto
Location: Online
Date: 23.6.2022
Deadline: 27.5.2022

__________________________________________________


While there has been sustained discussion on grief in relation to
illness, war, and death, what is at stake when we explore this
affective landscape in relation to loss and sadness, which
illuminate grief in the realm of the living? Without abandoning the
phenomena of individual and collective mourning in relation to
ongoing historical events and atrocities, how might we tend to the
deeper revelations that “grief” offers us? What are these revelations
that reside beneath “grief” and what do they offer? What ethical
engagements with “grief” enable a critique of modern conceptions of
temporality, spatiality, and corporeality that often compel, if not
demand, a linear engagement with loss, which assumes an expiration of
this affective relation? What livable futures might we imagine if we
embraced grief as a radical affective resource for change? This
gathering will consider multiple interpretations of grief, while
accounting for the situational, local, and transcultural contexts of
its emergence.

For this online symposium, we welcome presentations that draw upon
various modes of critical thought and new methodologies. This may
include standard academic papers or creative explorations that
utilize the archival, digital media and multi-modal engagements,
literary and non-literary texts, site analysis, and other source
materials.

Possible topics might address the following questions:

- Who represents the grievable body?
- Can grief produce collective exclusions (gender, race, class,
  disability, sexuality, etc)?
- Is the term ‘grief’ overused in current discourse? Who benefits
  from a grief economy?
- How can we situate the long and ongoing grief of Indigenous
  genocide and erasures? What loss is overlooked by reconciliation?
  Whose grief matters?
- What can Black feminist thought and activism teach us about the
  realm of grief?
- Can we grieve injustice through digital spaces? How has technology
  bifurcated the event or process?
- In what spaces can we imagine grief to exist?
- Who is forbidden from mourning?
- What might archival memories fail to tell us about pain?
- Whose grief, loss and mourning is acknowledged?
- How does grief extend to non-human beings, objects, and abstract
  concepts? Ways of doing things?

Send your 200-250 word abstract and 150-word bio by Friday, May 27,
2022 in a PDF format using the email title “Abstract Submission for
Anatomies of Grief”:
[email protected]

Selected presentations from the symposium will be considered for
future publication.


Contact:

Race, Ethics, and Power Project
Centre for Ethics
University of Toronto
Email: [email protected]
Web: https://ethics.utoronto.ca




__________________________________________________


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

InterPhil List Archive:
https://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

__________________________________________________

Reply via email to