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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20260409T161156Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20140601T050000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20140601T050000
SUMMARY:Enlightened Anarchism
UID:20260412T022049Z-iCalPlugin-Grails@philevents-web-f5d4878dd-r5qzs
TZID:America/Toronto
LOCATION:Rovaniemi\, Finland
DESCRIPTION:<p>An inter-disciplinary event organized by Lapland University\, in cooperation<br> with Cambridge University.<br> <br> <br> Keynote Speakers:<br> <br> George Katsiaficas\, Wentworth Institute of Technology<br> <br> Alexandre Christoyannopoulos\, Loughborough University<br> <br> <br> With Special Guest Speaker:<br> <br> Dimitrios Roussopoulous</p>\n\n<p>Please send abstracts of no more than 500 words\, including email address and<br> institutional affiliation\, to conference organizers Ali Jones at<br> <a href="mailto:ajones@ulapland.fi">ajones@ulapland.fi</a> and Mika Luoma-aho at <a href="mailto:mika.luoma-aho@ulapland.fi">mika.luoma-aho@ulapland.fi</a> by June<br> 1\, 2014.</p>\n\n<p>Anarchism has recently become a topic of scholarly focus\, as social and<br> political movements have become increasingly active across Europe and North<br> America. While traditional public opinion tends to view anarchism as<br> juvenile force of negation\, violence or gleeful destruction\, it is<br> nonetheless possible to examine a far more nuanced discourse\, as espoused by<br> the social actors involved. In fact\, many such groups are particularly<br> focused upon combatting fascism\, perceived state corruption\, the effects of<br> neoliberalism or globalization\, or to dedicating themselves to fighting for<br> environmental protection\, immigrant and refugee rights\, or in other arena of<br> social justice. Many of these aims could be interpreted as not only in the<br> public interest\, but also to constitute some of the cornerstones of<br> democracy itself. &nbsp\;Indeed\, despite the traditionally discussed perceptions<br> of anarchy\, it is in fact possible to view these social movements as highly<br> engaged public citizens\, which begs the question of why they are ostracized<br> and considered to be so politically threatening. It further causes one to<br> re-examine democracy and anarchy categorically and philosophically.<br> <br> This reconsideration further raises the debate surrounding the use of<br> political violence for achieving democratic goals. This conference<br> particularly wishes to open dialogue on these discourses\, especially the<br> moral\, and one could even say spiritual aims of such movements.<br> <br> Furthermore\, analysis and recent scholarship also asks whether anarchism<br> must be &ldquo\;justified&rdquo\; by such moral categories\, or if it should attempt to<br> remove itself from such dominating discourses. As such\, both moral and<br> anti-moral interpretations are welcome\, as well as those papers<br> interrogating this process of moral justification itself.<br> <br> Focusing upon this notion of enlightened anarchism\, the conference presents<br> a forum for discussing the moral\, anti-moral\, religious\, anti-religious\,<br> social justice\, democratic and anti-democratic\, or purely revolutionary<br> discourses of modern anarchists and social movements.<br> <br> The conference organizers are particularly interested in placing these<br> contrasting perspectives into fruitful and exciting conversation. Some<br> potential areas of focus include:<br> <br> -Enlightened anarchism<br> <br> -Political theology and social movements<br> <br> -The use of anarchism to achieve the goals of democracy<br> <br> -The use of anarchy to combat perceived corruption<br> <br> -The justification of destruction for purposes of social justice<br> <br> -Discussions of anarchist violence<br> <br> -The justification of violence for achieving democratic or moral goals<br> <br> -A re-examination of democracy and anarchism<br> <br> -Explicitly religious anarchism<br> <br> -Explicitly anti-religious anarchism<br> <br> -Anarchism as a non-religious morality<br> <br> -Anarchism rejecting the category of morality<br> <br> -Other types of anarchism<br> <br> - While papers on Marxism will of course be considered\, the conference<br> organizers hope that they will relate to anarchism in some way.<br> <br> <br> <br> Selected papers from the conference will then be compiled into an edited<br> volume\, and submitted to Cambridge University Press or another international<br> publisher by the end of 2014.<br> <br> While travel funding is unfortunately not possible\, limited subsidized<br> accommodations are available. Presenters are encouraged to contact<br> conference organizers Ali Jones at <a href="mailto:ajones@ulapland.fi">ajones@ulapland.fi</a> and Mika Luoma-aho at<br> <a href="mailto:mika.luoma-aho@ulapland.fi">mika.luoma-aho@ulapland.fi</a> with inquiries.<br> <br> <br> <br> Keynote Speaker Biographies<br> <br> George Katsiaficas has been active in social movements since 1969. A target<br> of the FBI's COINTELPRO program\, he was classified "Priority 1 ADEX"<br> (meaning in the event of a national emergency\, people like him were to be<br> immediately arrested). For 11 years\, he worked in Ocean Beach\, California as<br> part of a radical countercultural community (described in Andre Gorz's book\,<br> Ecology as Politics). He moved to Berlin\, after which he wrote two books:<br> one on the global imagination of 1968 and another on European social<br> movements. In these books\, he developed the concept of the &ldquo\;eros effect&rdquo\; to<br> name the sudden and synchronous eruption of insurgencies. For years\, he was<br> active in the cause of Palestinian rights. Together with Kathleen Cleaver\,<br> he co-edited Liberation\, Imagination and the Black Panther Party. A graduate<br> of MIT and UCSD (where he studied with Herbert Marcuse)\, he is currently<br> based at Wentworth Institute of Technology in Boston and also in Gwangju\,<br> South Korea\, where he finished a 2-volume book\, Asia&rsquo\;s Unknown Uprisings.<br> His web site is: <a target="_blank">http://www.eroseffect.com</a><br> <br> Alexandre Christoyannopoulos is Senior Lecturer in Politics and<br> International Relations at Loughborough University\, which he joined in<br> 2010.He is the author of Christian Anarchism: A Political Commentary on the<br> Gospel\, a seminal book which brings together the writings of disparate<br> Christian anarchists\, Tolstoy in particular\, and presents a comprehensive<br> exegesis arguing that Jesus&rsquo\; teaching implies anarchism. He has also<br> published a number of articles\, chapters and other publications on Tolstoy<br> and on Christian anarchism\, and edited Religious Anarchism: New<br> Perspectives. He is currently working on a monograph on Tolstoy&rsquo\;s political<br> thought\, and co-editing a new collection of essays on anarchism and<br> religion.A Fellow of the Higher Education Academy\, he also acts as Treasurer<br> of the Anarchist Studies Network and officer of the International Political<br> Science Association&rsquo\;s research committee on Politics and Religion.His<br> website\, which includes a full list of publications (many of which are<br> openly accessible online) and a more extensive biography\, can be accessed<br> via <a target="_blank">http://www.christoyannopoulos.com</a>.</p>
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