Konferencja
AFTER AGENCY: International Conference
‘After Agency’ is a provocation. It seems that agency might be in trouble – what we think of it, what we make of it, what and who has it and what emerges in its unfolding or de-folding. Scholars have informed us of the more-than-human agencies of emergent worlds (Haraway, 2008; Tsing, 2015; Kirsky, 2015; Kohn, 2013) and the speculative becomings of/with agencies that alter the possibility of worlds (Morton, 2013; Taussig, 2018; Murphy, 2017; Weizman, 2012; Barad, 2007) in the context of capitalist violence, anthropogenic toxicities and the timely matter of life itself.
‘Agency’ and the collective sensibility of agency inform the practice of research, knowledge production, methodologies and methods of situated thinking with the world at large. The posthuman and ontological turn in the wake of the Anthropocene (Braidotti, 2013; Wark, 2015; Chandler, 2018; Castro, 2009; Escobar, 2018) offers a certain opportunity to push further, conceptual questionings of what is conventionally thought of as agency. Attuned to the situatedness of each of our many political encounters – we notice the spectre of financial violence, white supremacy and capitalist injustice wound up in the figuring of our presumed times “after agency.” Does this not then call for a reimagining of our methods and methodologies?
Guided by three web interventions by McKenzie Wark, Rosi Braidotti and Peter Kahn, this international conference situated at the Humanities/Art/Technology Research Center in Poznan, Poland calls on participants (academics, artists, performers, activists, readers and writers) to join us at the confluence of three streams discussing: Resistance, Speculation, and Adaptation in these troubled times of agency.
STREAM #1 RESISTANCE
What characterizes academic labor in the contemporary moment is a severance between scholarly research and ‘on the ground’ strategies of resistance. There are, of course, some exceptions. McKenzie Wark’s Molecular Red, for one, strikes a call to develop poetic forms of knowledge production which can provide new strategies of living in the Capitalocene. This workshop stream responds obliquely to Wark’s call and organizes itself around the concept of resistance and the knowledge economies that undergird our understanding of agential power. Given the rise of algorithmic governance (the cybernetic hypothesis) and the generational violence of deep-time environmental destruction (the Anthropocene hypothesis), we must move beyond a mere description of the situation we find ourselves in and ask – what tools are available to us? What techniques and practices of resistance can we call upon that are still viable? And how can we recognize when resistance itself becomes a hubristic normative reproduction at best, and at worst – a ‘disruptive’ capitalist ethos?
This stream welcomes experimental yet pragmatic approaches to strategies of resistance. No site of knowledge production will be privileged. We will think pragmatically about revolutionary practices that oppose traditional concepts of liberal solutionism. Whether our strategies of resistance begin in the fields of art, economics, science, or social organizing, we will be unabashedly antagonistic and (anti)political in our aims. We welcome presentations that engage emerging political technologies, social movements, philosophies of living, and artistic refusals of all sorts. Our goal is to think through resistance as a way to de-naturalize the world and to destroy that which destroys us.
STREAM #2 SPECULATION
The idea of speculation requires an agential and compositional inquiry. Speculation seems to form and ingrain worlds, in turbulence and beyond. Speculative acts in art, finance, knowledge production and a range of interacting and intra-acting world-making disciplines, imply becomings. Drawing from Rosi Braidotti’s notion of the posthuman and a posthuman humanities, this stream invites a conversation on speculating-with and thinking of speculation in the context of affirming bonds “that locates the subject in the flow of relations with multiple others” (Braidotti 2016, 99). What circulations can a speculative posthuman ethics speak to? What are some of the implications of this thinking on our collective practices? What are some of the challenges of this agenda? How do situated stories and ontologies speak to the project?
Recognizing the need for a more-than-human circulation in the posthuman circulation of stories, this stream is keen for a situated engagement with the HAT Research Center as a situated site of material and discourse – re-forming, re-thinking and speculating with the living, in finding allies in these precarious airs and times. We desire speculation in decolonial terms. We seek speculative assistance in-trouble and we intend on gathering a conversation on our research and practice to ask where could these speculations go?
STREAM #3 ADAPTATION
The concept of adaptation is crucial in considering the increasing technological impact on “nature” and evolutionary changes in human behaviour. For many scientists, such as the psychologist Peter Kahn, adaptation describes an organism’s adjustment to its environment (Kahn, 2011). Thus, adaptation is not in itself normative; it is a mostly multilayered and a multidirectional set of actions. What Kahn stresses in his analysis is that the inalienable element of adaptive processes is harm. He demarcates two types of harm: direct harm, and the harm of unfulfilled flourishing. In this stream, we would like to discuss unintentional harm in the broader problematics of agential adaptation. Indirect forms of harm should push us toward re-contextualizing human and nonhuman agencies inscribed in the Anthropocene (with all the different terminological options, such as the Capitalocene, Plantationocene, Chthulucene etc.). We are also interested in refiguring the common perception of the supposed ‘nonagentiality’ of human and nonhuman forces, asking about harm in post- and de-colonial research and in necropolitics (A. Mbembe 2003, 2016). From the perspective of social changes and new policies, we are going to discuss to what extent harm could be seen as a necessary and controlled condition for resilient and adaptive societies on both the local and global scale?
IMPORTANT DATES:
Abstract submission deadline: 30 MAY 2019 16 JUNE 2019
Abstract acceptance notification: 30 JUNE 2019 14 JULY 2019
Conference date: 12-14 NOVEMBER 2019
Full paper submission deadline: 15 DECEMBER 2019
ABSTRACT SUBMISSION:
All abstracts should be submitted using the EasyChair system. Submission link: easychair.org/conferences/?conf=aa19
The length of the abstract must be between 300 and 500 words (excluding title, keywords and references). All the abstracts/proposals will be peer-reviewed by two external reviewers. Please state in the abstract precisely the form of presentation and the title of the stream you are going to submit the presentation.
Presentations delivered during the conference should not be longer than 20 minutes.
There is no conference fee for the speakers. We will also be able to offer accommodation (12-14 November 2019) for the speakers; coffee and lunch during the conference days.
There will be a monograph published after the conference, with selected papers post peer review.
ORGANISING COMMITTEE:
Agnieszka Jelewska
Humanities/Art/Technology Research Center
Adam Mickiewicz University
e-mail: jelewska@amu.edu.pl
Michał Krawczak
Humanities/Art/Technology Research Center
Adam Mickiewicz University
e-mail: michal.krawczak@amu.edu.pl
Harshavardhan Bhat
University of Westminster
e-mail: harsh.s.bhat@gmail.com
Brett Zehner
Brown University
e-mail: brett_zehner@brown.edu