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CFP: Call for papers Keeping it Honest: Vulnerable writing

Call for papers

Keeping it Honest: Vulnerable writing

Confirmed keynote speakers:
Lars Hertzberg (Department of Philosophy, Åbo Academy University)
Shahram Khosravi (Department of Social Anthropology, Stockholm University)

The conference is hosted by the research program Engaging Vulnerability and organized in collaboration with the Nordic Wittgenstein Society.

Organizing committee: Elinor Hållén and Gisela Bengtsson
Date: August 22-23, 2019.
Place: Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.

Conference theme:
Using a theoretical framework as a starting-point and defending a position within that framework often function as unspoken requirements for those who wish to be conceived of as serious and highly engaged researchers in the humanities and the social sciences today. Moreover, since the ability to predict consequences and possible results of research projects may be decisive for the possibility of attaining funding, researchers strive to gain control of the direction of their work as early as possible.

Sometimes a conflict arises, however, between the ambitions rising from such requirements and expectations and an ambition to let sincerity and engagement be principal guidelines when conducting research. Defending a certain position may even become incompatible with remaining truthful and engaged in one’s projects. An example of such a conflict is found in Wittgenstein, who likened his philosophical investigations with traveling criss-cross in every direction over a wide field of thought, and described the form of a philosophical problem with the words “I don’t know my way about” (PI Preface). His thoughts were crippled, he wrote, if he tried to force them in one single direction. His struggle to find a form of presentation, a way of writing, was connected with an ambition to keep philosophy honest and with his thought that work in philosophy is “a work on oneself. On one’s own conception.” (CV 24). So in Wittgenstein’s case, the question of philosophical method cannot be divorced from the question of finding the apt form of presentation for philosophical thought.

To deviate from accepted guidelines for how to write in research is to place oneself in a vulnerable position. It is to risk being made invisible or to stand out as insincere while struggling to retain an honest approach to the work one is engaged in. There is also a more personal aspect to writing vulnerably: it takes courage to break with norms, and it often means breaking with a way of seeing and conceptualizing that has become second nature, partly through academic training. How do I stay true to that which I write about? How do I stay open to the unexpected, allowing myself to be taken by surprise in my research? How can I avoid that the ever-present ambition of getting things under control, finding a sense of direction or finality, takes centre stage? Another aspect of vulnerability and honesty comes in when one’s academic writing is a representation of the lives of others. How can we describe the lives of others in ways that do justice to them? And how can I best reveal and communicate their situation to the reader? Can it be a merit of an academic text that it engages the reader morally, emotionally, aesthetically, as well as intellectually to feel the truth of the stories, in the way that, for example, an auto-ethnographic text aims to do? And can my personal, embodied experiences be a resource in my academic writing that strengthens, deepens and enriches my analysis of, and reflections on, that which I study?

The conference aims to elucidate the notion of vulnerable writing and the question of honesty from different perspectives, both as it is found and discussed in philosophy, and as thematized in a wide range of other disciplinary areas, for instance, ethnology, anthropology, social studies, gender studies, literary studies, rhetoric, etc..

This is the 10th annual conference organized by the Nordic Wittgenstein Society.

Abstract submission:
Abstracts of maximum 300 words should be submitted by May 10 to: EVkonferensNWS@gmail.com
Please indicate academic field or discipline of author when submitting an abstract.
The length of presentations will be 45 minutes (including discussion):

Topics of interest for submission include, but are not limited to:
Wittgenstein’s philosophical method; the question of honesty in research; auto-ethnographic studies; the rhetoric of vulnerability; the relation between form and content in Wittgenstein’s work; the ethical implications of different ways of writing in research; representing the lives of others in academic texts; vulnerable writing and gender; the relation between writing fiction and academic writing.

Information will be posted shortly at:

NWS CONFERENCE 2019: Vulnerable Writing

For further information contact Elinor Hållén:
elinor.hallen@filosofi.uu.se
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CFP: Hegel and Wittgenstein – Negativity and Language

The aim of the workshop is to foster a modern philosophical dialogue capable of integrating the disconnected philosophical traditions which followed Hegel in the nineteenth century and Wittgenstein in the twentieth. The event, which is taking place at Charles University in Prague between 11 and 13 June 2019, will focus on the topic of negativity and language in Hegel and Wittgenstein, and compare differences and similarities in their approaches.

The workshop will also continue the discussion begun at the Wittgenstein–Hegel conference at TU Dresden in June 2017. We will be introducing the new volume Wittgenstein and Hegel – Reevaluation of Difference (edited by Jakub Mácha and Alexander Berg), in which twenty-three contributors explore new understandings of the relationship between Wittgenstein’s and Hegel’s philosophy. The volume is being published by De Gruyter (Berlin) and is due to be released in June 2019.
Call for abstracts

Abstracts (ca. 300 words) should be sent to Alexander.Berg75@googlemail.com by April 1, 2019.
Abstracts should be ready for double-blind review, we thus ask to remove any identification detail from the abstract. We kindly ask to send the author’s name, paper title, and affiliation in the body of the email.
Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by April 15, 2019.
Presentations will be allotted a total of 60 minutes, ideally 30 minutes of presentation + 30 minutes of discussion.

The workshop will be guided by: Paul Redding and Pirmin Stekeler-Weithofer
Organisers: Alexander Berg and Vojtěch Kolman
http://wittgensteinhegel2017.weebly.com/negativity-and-language.html

Crisis and Critique: Philosophical Analysis and Current Events


Kirchberg/Wechsel, August 4 – 10, 2019.

If you intend to present a paper, please obtain an electronic submissions link. The process is explained here:
www.alws.at/iws_organization/submission-process/

and please mind our instructions for authors:

www.alws.at/iws_organization/instructions-for-authors/

Before you send your paper to the organizers, please make sure that you are registered. For registration, please download the Registration Form:www.alws.at/iws_organization/registration/

and send it to:

Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society (ALWS) Markt 63
A-2880 Kirchberg am Wechsel
Austria, Europe

For further information visit:

www.alws.at/symposium/42nd-international-wittgenstein-symposium-2019/

or contact:
Maga Margret Kronaus | E-mail: alws@aon.at

The 11th Ludwig Wittgenstein Summer School in Kirchberg/Wechsel, organised by ALWS, will be held prior to the symposium: July 30 – August 3, 2019.

Wittgenstein’s Tractatus

with Cora DIAMOND (Charlottesville), James CONANT (Chicago/Leipzig) & Martin GUSTAFSSON (Turku)

Scientific organization and direction: Volker A. MUNZ (Klagenfurt, ALWS).
For further information see: www.alws.at/11th-ludwig-wittgenstein-summer-school/

We are very much looking forward to seeing you in Kirchberg this August. Best Regards,

David Wagner
(General Secretary, ALWS)

Fourth Wittgenstein Conference in China

The Fourth Wittgenstein Conference in China will be in Xi’an in October 19-20, 2019. Call for papers now! The Conference is international, sponsored by Chinese Wittgenstein Society and hosted by Northwest University in Xi’an. Please submit your paper to Professor Xueguang Zhang at zxg@nwu.edu.cn

Two new reviews

Floyd, J., & Katz, J. E. (Eds.). (2015). Review of Philosophy of Emerging Media: Understanding, Appreciation, Application by Charles Brewer. Oxford ; New York: Oxford University Press.

Beale, J., & Kidd, I. J. (Eds.). (2017). Review of Wittgenstein and Scientism by Ryan Manhire (1 edition). New York: Routledge.

https://project1-nsylgljk0z.live-website.com/resources/book-reviews-requests/reviews#recent

The FCT-funded project “Epistemology of Religious Belief: Wittgenstein, Grammar and the Contemporary World” is offering a post-doc contract

The FCT-funded project “Epistemology of Religious Belief: Wittgenstein, Grammar and the Contemporary World” is offering a post-doc contract (not a grant) at the Nova University of Lisbon. The position is for 30 months, starting (inflexibly) on 1st March 2019. The salary is €29,796.76 per year (14 months). The application deadline is 2nd January 2019.

Further details in English can be found here:
http://fcsh.unl.pt/faculdade/recursos-humanos/concursos/nao-docentes/18344-2018-en.pdf

And in Portuguese here:
http://fcsh.unl.pt/faculdade/recursos-humanos/concursos/nao-docentes/aviso-18344-2018.pdf

I call the attention of prospective applicants to the last paragraph of the call:

In the case of the PhD of the selected candidates has been conferred by a foreign higher education institution, the recognition of the referred degree must comply with the provisions of Decree-Law No. 341/2007, from October 12, and, under penalty of exclusion, any formalities established therein must be fulfilled up to the date of signature of the contract.

For information about the project, please visit:
http://www.eplab.ifilnova.pt/projects/erb

Nordic Wittgenstein Review Vol. 7 No 2 (2018)


NWR Volume 7 / Number 2 (December 2018) is now published online and available Open Access.  

Table of contents:

Nordic Wittgenstein Review Vol. 7 No 2 (2018)

Table of contents:

Note from the Editors
Simo Säätelä, Gisela Bengtsson, Tove Österman: Note from the Editors

Invited Paper
Avner Baz: Stanley Cavell’s Argument of the Ordinary

Articles
Ondrej Beran:”Give me an Example”: Peter Winch and Learning from the Particular
Leonidas Tsilipakos: Social Criticism, Moral Reasoning and the Literary Form

Interview
Inheriting Wittgenstein: Niklas Forsberg in Conversation with James Conant, Part 2.

From the Archives
Nuno Venturinha and Jonathan Smith: Wittgenstein on British Anti-Nazi Propaganda
Alfred Schmidt: Ludwig Wittgenstein’s Nachlass in the UNESCO Memory of the World Register

Book Reviews
Olli Lagerspetz: Review of “Wittgenstein and Modernism” ed. by Michael LeMahieu and Karen Zumhagen-Yekplé
Eric J. Ritter: Review of “Becoming Who We Are: Politics and Practical Philosophy in the Work of Stanley Cavell” by Andrew Norris

NEXT SUBMISSION DEADLINE

  • Deadline for Vol. 8 / No. 1: Feb. 28, 2019. Publ. June 2019.

Philosophy of Film Without Theory Conference

Registration for the Philosophy of Film Without Theory Conference (& Conference Dinner) is now open.

 

This international, interdisciplinary conference is being held on Thursday 10th, and Friday 11th, January 2019, at the University of York in the UK.

Keynote Speakers are:

Lucy Bolton (Queen Mary, University of London)

Mikel Burley (University of Leeds)

Sophie Grace Chappell (Open University)

Victor Dura-Vila (University of Leeds)

Andrew Klevan (University of Oxford)

David Macarthur (University of Sydney)

Colin Heber Percy (Screenwriter and priest)

 

A further 24 Invited Speakers from 15 countries, including Morocco, Guyana, the USA, Australia, and across Europe will be presenting talks (in parallel sessions).

 

Registration is open to all (and closes on the 31st December, 2018).

 

In the Conference Call for Abstracts we characterised Philosophy Without Theory as, “a plurality of methodologies that include fine-grained description and discernment; disentangling confusions; reactive and/or reflective critical inquiry, the exploration of conceptual connections; logical geography; conceptual synthesis; the provision of perspicuous presentations and surveyable overviews; non-systematic engagement with individual or particular works, subjects, objects, ideas, events and/or situations…  and more”

 

We went on to suggest that Philosophy Without Theory about film might also include, “a commitment to focus on, and pay close attention to, individual films.”

 

The invited speakers have found a range of opportunities and challenges in the very idea of Philosophy of Film Without Theory, and the titles of their presentations can now be found on the conference website, here:

 

https://philosophyoffilmwithouttheory.com/programme/

 

To Register for the Conference please go to the Registration Online Store, here:

 

https://store.york.ac.uk/product-catalogue/philosophy/the-philosophy-of-film-without-theory-conference

 

Or via the Conference Website’s Registration page, here:

 

https://philosophyoffilmwithouttheory.com/registration/

 

We do hope you will join us in York, in January, 2019.

 

Thank very much to our conference supporters: the White Rose College of Arts and Humanities (WRoCAH), the UK’s Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), the British Society of Aesthetics (BSA), the University of York and the University of York’s Philosophy Department.