The New School Philosophy Department Graduate Students Present:

TEXTURES OF CHANGE

Social Imaginaries, Narratives & the Possibility of Politics

April 13-15, 2023

 

How do we define imaginaries and narratives in relation to our political and social life?

It has become common for political theorists and philosophers to insist on the neces- sity of new imaginaries and narratives. Crises of authority, financial meltdowns, and environmental disasters compel us to look for alternative frameworks and practices. While the urgency of this claim is undeniable, the conceptual ground for the creation of new imaginaries and narratives is still unclear. How do we define imaginaries and narratives in relation to our political and social life? How can they become normative and generate conceptual and practical shifts? And who is in a position to shape, direct, and take ownership of these emergent conceptions?

This conference focuses on the current debate on political imaginaries and narratives to investigate some of these questions. As a starting point, we propose to challenge standard Marxist or epistemological approaches to the topic that either interpret imaginaries and narratives as ideological projections (a product of false conscious- \ness) or merely as individual, cognitive faculties. Rather, we suggest thinking about imaginaries and narratives as larger sensuous and embodied practices that re-orient material structures of domination and allow for a reflective rearticulation of collective demands. In particular, we set out to clarify: the meaning of “imaginaries” and/or “narratives” as forms of sense-making; their ability to shift existing discourses and power relations; the way in which they foster different ways of feeling, seeing, acting-in, and experiencing the world in a time of crisis; the way in which they are embedded in artistic and literary practices; and the way in which they address—or fail to address—marginalized subjects.

 

KEYNOTE SPEAKERS

María Pía Lara

Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana

"Feminism as a Concept of Movement: The Sediments of the Historical Reorganization of Feminist Imaginaries"

Fanny Söderbäck

Södertörn University

"Narration as a Practice of Care in the Wake of Violence: Adriana Cavarero's Narrative Theory and Saidiya Hartman's Critical Fabulation"


Eva Von Redecker

Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin 

"The Liberation of Times and Tide: Radical Transformation In an Eco Feminist Key"


Wolff Conference Room, D1103, 

11th Floor, 6 E. 16th St, New York, New York 10003

We will be located at the New School for Social Research. For those interested in joining via zoom, please register for the event by following this link.