__________________________________________________

Conference Announcement

Theme: Hegel, slavery and abolition
Type: 5th Workshop Hegel (anti)kolonial & Guest Lecture
Institution: Humboldt University Berlin
Location: Berlin (Germany) – Online
Date: 29.–30.8.2022

__________________________________________________


The 5th edition of Hegel (anti)kolonial addresses Hegel’s
philosophical stance on slavery, especially in the context of
colonialism. While Hegel’s famous dialectic of lordship and bondage
in the Phenomenology of Spirit has often been read as emancipatory
critique of oppressive relations such as slavery, and his theory of
freedom praises the notion that all human beings are entitled to
freedom as an insight that is pivotal to modernity, there are various
places in Hegel’s oeuvre where he takes a deeply ambivalent position
when it comes to slavery. Thus, in lectures from his Berlin period,
he revisits the dialectic of lordship and bondage in order to present
colonial slavery as a necessary precondition for liberation that
serves to educate and discipline enslaved people, and he claims that
transatlantic chattle slavery marks a progress vis-à-vis the
cruelties that characterize, in his account, traditional forms of
life in Africa. And in a long remark following section 57 in his
Elements of the Philosophy of Right, Hegel constructs the
contemporary debate on slavery as an “antinomy” in which both sides
grasp a partial truth: those who reject slavery are right insofar as
slavery is ultimately unjust; yet at the same time, those who defend
slavery are right insofar as humans are initially “natural beings”
that have to go through a process of education in order to become
free—a process in which slavery has a legitimate place. This
ambivalent assessment of slavery is matched by remarks that Hegel
makes in his Lectures on the Philosophy of History about abolition,
one of the biggest moral and political issues in his lifetime: Hegel
favours gradual abolition, rejecting demands for an immediate
abolition of slavery on the grounds that enslaved people have to be
sufficiently educated before they are capable of a life in freedom. 

How can we exactly understand Hegel’s pronouncements on slavery, and
what are their underlying philosophical motivations? How do they
connect to other parts of his system, such as his views on property
and personality, and his theories of race and of history? How can we
understand Hegel’s place in 19th century debates on slavery and
abolition, and how do these issues relate to more recent
philosophical engagements with Hegel? These are some of the questions
that we are going to discuss at our workshop.


Program
(Berlin times)

Monday, August 29th, 2022
Guest lecture

18:15
Robert Bernasconi:
Philosophical histories as sites of racism

Abstract:
https://hegelantikolonial.wordpress.com/guest-lecture-by-robert-bernasconi-philosophical-histories-as-sites-of-racism/


Tuesday, August 30th, 2022
Workshop

10:30
Daniel James (Heinrich-Heine-University Duesseldorf), Franz Knappik
(University of Bergen):
Welcome and Introduction: Hegel on Slavery – Texts and Contexts

11:00
Robert Bernasconi (Pennsylvania State University):
Hegel and the Alleged Necessity of African Slavery

11:30
David James (University of Warwick):
Does Hegel’s Theory of the Relationship Between Personality and
Property Justify Colonial Oppression?

12:00
Discussion

13:15
Lunch break

14:30
Lydia Moland (Colby College):
The Failed European: Images, Narrative, and Racist Hierarchy in
Hegel’s Philosophy of History

15:00
Nathaniel Adam Tobias Coleman (University of Warwick):
Hegel and Heyrick

15:30
Discussion

16:45
Coffee break

17:15
Josias Tembo (Radboud University):
Hegel’s African Subject and the Lord-Bondsman Dialectic: Thoughts on
Fanon’s and Mbembe’s Renditions

17:45
Discussion

18:30
End

Abstracts:
https://hegelantikolonial.wordpress.com/hegel-slavery-and-abolition-abstracts/


Venue / Zoom

Humboldt University Berlin, Main Building
Unter den Linden 6, Room 2070A

Streamed via Zoom.
Online participants are welcome to take part in the discussion. To
register, click here:
https://uib.zoom.us/meeting/register/u5Ipf-6vqj8oH9NCpWkc-HaHfOVDk3WcPs-D


Organizers

This workshop is organized by Daniel James and Franz Knappik, with
the support of Tobias Rosefeldt (HU Berlin).

Daniel James
Email: [email protected]

Franz Knappik
Email: [email protected]


For more information, please visit:
https://hegelantikolonial.wordpress.com






__________________________________________________


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

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

__________________________________________________

Reply via email to