CFP: Non-Jewish Messianicities and Literature: Between Theology and Politics, between Traditions
Submission deadline: May 15, 2025
Conference date(s):
September 3, 2025 - September 4, 2025
Conference Venue:
Centre for Metaphysics, Philosophy of Religion and Philosophy of Culture, KU Leuven
Leuven,
Belgium
Topic areas
Details
Just like in religion and politics, ideas, images and beliefs understood as “messianic” also live in literature. Being a multidimensional phenomenon, messianism has to do with the questions of philosophy of history and its end, law and anomia, violence and eternal peace, tradition and breaking with it. Jaques Derrida, who also reflected a lot on the relation between philosophy and literature throughout his entire career, proposed to replace the strong, theologically loaded notion of messianism with a weaker concept of messianicity which would be devoid of any explicit religious, dogmatic connotations and therefore to understand it as a primarily philosophical concept. In the recent decades the attention of scholars was first of all attracted to the messianic theme in the literary tradition associated with Judaism. However, despite that both in philosophy and literature messianism is indeed first of all present in authors belonging (in a stronger or weaker sense) to the Jewish tradition, a strong echo of this concept is present in other traditions, as well as controversies and tensions that messianism brings about. Therefore, the focus of the workshop is to trace and map different messianisms or messianicities in secular literary traditions and to explicate the resonances of a concept with Jewish origins in non-Jewish contexts and to look for the overlaps and possible dialogues between various literary traditions and texts.
Being associated with controversial and dangerous ideas, such as the most radical forms of nationalism and religious exclusivity, antinomianism, transgression, and justification of political violence, messianism and its paradoxes are mediated and worked through literary texts, which can be understood both as exercises of political and religious imagination and explorations of different dimensions of messianicity. Walter Benjamin once recapitulated one of the conceptions of the messianic world-to-come as “everything will be the same as here—only a little bit different.” This idea of minimal change can be also applied to the messianic dimension of literature itself: At the end of the day, literature’s impact on the world is precisely this, it does not change anything in the world, and yet a literary text introduces a tiny imperceptible adjustment to the world, so everything stays the same, only a little bit different. Core aporias of messianicity also find their expression in the domain of language, since genuine, proper use of language transgresses its rules, going beyond the letter of grammar and its “proper” conduct, saves language by sinning against its laws. Thus, the language in which a messianic message can be expressed is always a language in-making, a marginalized dialect or distorted jargon, where categories like “correct” and “incorrect”, “rule” and “exception” are no longer applicable. Therefore, we propose to focus not only on the content, but also on the form of texts in various literary traditions which bear an imprint of messianicity in them.
Our workshop proposes the following topics for discussion, however the range of possible topics is not limited by this list:
● Relation between messianicity and literature: What can a literary text tell us about messianicity and what the concept of messianicity is capable of grasping in a literary text?
● Literary text as a mediation: What is the potential of literary text which mediates, works through radical, transgressive, antinomian ideas? What are the limitations of such mediation?
● Form: Is there a messianic literary form, as, for example Giorgio Agamben claims in his analysis of rhyme in The Time that Remains?
● Tradition: Is it possible to speak of a messianic tradition in modern literature? If so, how can this tradition be characterised?
Keynote speakers: Daria Farafonova (University of Genoa), Agata Bielik-Robson (Polish Academy of Science)
Abstract Submission deadline: 15 May 2025
Notification of acceptance: 25 May 2025
Organizers: Georgy Layus, Willem Styfhals
The working language of the workshop is English. Unfortunately organizers are not able to reimburse participants’ travel and accommodation costs. All submissions should include title of the presentation, author’s name and affiliation, a short biographical note (up to 100 words) and an abstract of the presentation (up to 500 words). Please send your submissions to: [email protected]