Risking the Future: Vulnerability, Resistance, Hope - 12-13 July 2016, Durham University
Type: Call for Papers
Date: July 12, 2016 to July 13, 2016
Location: United Kingdom
Subject Fields: Humanities, Philosophy, Political History / Studies, Sexuality Studies, Race Studies
RISKING THE FUTURE: VULNERABILITY, RESISTANCE, HOPE
An International Conference on the Risk Humanities
Durham University, UK
12-13 July 2016
Keynote Speakers:
Michaeline Crichlow
Professor of African and African American Studies, Duke University
Simon During
Australian Research Professor, University of Queensland
Walter Mignolo
William H. Wannamaker Professor of Romance Studies, Duke University
Risking the Future exposes
a tension at the heart of contemporary thinking around risk and its
effects, and in particular the role of risk in either blocking or
facilitating access to possible futures. On the one hand, the phrase is
cautionary, a reminder that the future is at risk and that risks have to
be calculated and managed to avoid or learn to live within catastrophic
circumstances. On the other hand, the phrase is hopeful, a recognition
that a certain type of risk is necessary to generate a speculative
opening to a future worth living. In this way, although risk manifests
in complex historical and contemporary patterns across the economic,
legal, ecological, social, cultural, aesthetic and political spheres, it
is most urgently felt where the exercise and effects of power are tied
to potential loss and gain, and where these losses and gains shape the
lives of those least able to resist them.
In this light,
rethinking the relation of risk and futurity suggests a tension between
the calculation, management and adoption of risk on one hand, and what
it actually means to live a life at risk on the other. For those living
in fragile circumstances – situations in which race, ethnicity, gender,
sexuality, religion and poverty intersect in ways that render existence
itself radically vulnerable; situations in which it is increasingly
difficult to avoid or resist political instability, conflict, economic
precarity, health crises, and ecological catastrophe – the question of
risk exists at a very different intensity, and has very different
implications than it does for individuals, groups and even whole
societies who regard risk principally in terms of its calculation,
distribution and management undertaken to guarantee continued
flourishing, often in the very systems that place the vulnerable at
risk.
We seek to bring these two paradigms of risk – of
calculation and precarity – into conversation, perhaps necessarily into
conflict, in order to challenge existing discourses regarding risk and
its relation to the future. We seek to explore the ways in which thought
might take risks in order to realign itself with those most at risk. We
seek to open new and risky avenues for speculative, interdisciplinary
research, reimagining the way in which risk thinking might turn an
increasingly threatening vision of the future towards a politics of
hope.
We warmly invite you to submit a title and abstract of 300 words for papers of 20 minutes rethinking
risk and its relation to the future from the perspective of the
critical humanities and humanistic social sciences. Please include a
brief biographical note of up to 200 words outlining your broader
research interests.
The deadline for the submission of abstracts is 18 April 2016 and should be emailed to fragile.futures@gmail.com.
Suggested topics
- Risk and futurity: uncertainty, contingency, irreversibility, possibility
- Fragility, vulnerability, precarity and the precariat
- Hope, resistance, commitment
- Kinopolitics: displacement, migration, perilous crossings, border thinking
- Spaces of risk: thresholds, boundaries, containment, camps
- Decolonial aesthetics and politics
- Aesthetics of risk: representing, mediating and performing the future
- Freedom and unfreedom: open futures, blocked futures
- Existential risk: threat, conflict, poverty, disposability
- Accumulation by dispossession: capitalism and risk, risking capitalism
- Markets: distribution, flow, asymmetry, crisis
- Sexualities, genders, queer ecologies, queer futures
- Systemic edges: peripheries of/at risk, belonging and non-belonging, inclusion and exclusion
- Ecologies of/at risk: environmental anxiety, slow violence, ruination, catastrophe
- Histories and futures of risk: opportunity, intervention, invention, reinvention
General information
Risking the Future is the launch event for the Matariki Risk Humanities Network,
an inclusive, interdisciplinary, international research network based
in the Matariki Network of Universities (Dartmouth College, Durham
University, Queen’s University, University of Otago, University of
Tübingen, University of Western Australia, and Uppsala University). It
aims to foster collaborative research both within the network and with
external partners. The Matariki Risk Humanities Network proposes
to critically examine a constellation of interwoven concepts – risk,
contingency, fragility, vulnerability, precarity, crisis, threat,
security, resilience, trust and hope – in their broader transhistorical
and transcultural dimensions by stimulating an interdisciplinary
conversation centred in the strong tradition of critique historically
prevalent in the Humanities, but open to a range of methodologies and
approaches. For further details, please consult the preliminary website:
http://matarikiriskhumani.wix.com/matariki-risknetwork.
Conference organizers
Marc Botha (English Studies, Durham University)
Francisco-J. Hernández Adrián (Modern Languages and Cultures and CVAC, Durham University)
Organized with the support of
IHRR – Institute for Hazard, Risk and Resilience, Durham University
CVAC – Centre for Visual Arts and Cultures, Durham University
Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Durham University
Directorate of the Matariki Network of Universities
Conference venue
Risking the Future will be hosted at St. John’s College, Durham University,
in the heart of Durham City. Accommodation will be available at the
college, and there are a variety of hotels and B&Bs within easy
reach of the conference venue. Travel to Durham by rail and air is
straightforward from most regional and international destinations. A
modest conference fee will be charged to cover venue and catering costs,
which will include lunches and regular coffees/teas. Further travel,
accommodation and registration details will be provided in due course,
and will be available on the conference website.
Conference website