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Apologies for cross- posting.
Registrations are open for:
Italian Thought Today: Biopolitics, Nihilism, Empire

University of Kent, 5th - 6th April 2008
International conference financed by the British Academy, The Kent  
Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, and the School of  
European Culture and Languages

Conference Organiser: Dr Lorenzo Chiesa ([log in to unmask])

Against the background of a recent and widespread resurgence of  
Italian contemporary thought, and Italian leftist political theory in  
particular, the aim of this conference is twofold. First, the  
conference intends to explore the notions of biopolitics, Empire, and  
nihilism as elaborated in the recent works of some of the most  
important Italian living philosophers. Secondly, and more importantly,  
this conference aims to assess the impact of these notions on academic  
fields as diverse as political theory, economics, cognitive science,  
sociology, and literature.

"Italian Thought Today" therefore aspires to promote an  
interdisciplinary dialogue across the humanities and social sciences  
that should at the same time also problematise the philosophical  
notions mentioned above in light of their application to a non- 
philosophical domain. Is Negri's idea that the globalisation of world  
markets has led to a progressive decline in the sovereignty of nation- 
states useful to explain the Realpolitik of today's diplomacy? How can  
Vattimo's emancipatory concept of "active" nihilism be challenged by  
the "passive" nihilism that seems to pervade much of contemporary  
Italian popular culture? Shouldn't Agamben analyses of the politics of  
life be expanded in order to include detailed economical considerations?

Although the notions investigated in this conference have lately been  
the object of much attention, the novelty of this conference lies in  
its intention to contextualise them beyond the boundaries of  
philosophical discourse. This conference will bring together some of  
the protagonists of today's Italian philosophical scene, a number of  
well-established critics of their work, as well as a number of leading  
scholars from across the humanities and social sciences who, in their  
recent research, have been confronting themselves with the concepts of  
biopolitics, Empire, and nihilism.

Confirmed speakers:

Professor Gianni Vattimo (Professor of Theoretical Philosophy,  
University of Turin, Italy):Nihilism as Emancipation
Professor Roberto Esposito (Professor of Theoretical Philosophy,  
Istituto Scienze Umane, Naples, Italy): Totalitarianism or Biopolitics
Dr Sergio Benvenuto (Psychoanalyst and Senior Researcher, Institute  
for Cognitive Sciences and Technologies, Italian Council for  
Scientific Research, Rome, Italy): The Push Towards the Real: On Bio- 
Politics
Professor Andrea Fumagalli (Associate Professor of Economics,  
University of Pavia, Italy):Bioeconomy and the Valorisation Process
Professor Timothy Campbell (Associate Professor, Italian Studies,  
Cornell University, USA):From the Impolitical to the Impersonal:  
Roberto Esposito's Politics of Life
Professor Timothy Murphy (Associate Professor, English, University of  
Oklahoma, USA):Pedagogy of the Moltitude: Negri on Stage
Dr Jelica Sumic Riha (Senior Researcher, Institute of Philosophy,  
University of Ljubljana, Slovenia): Giorgio Agamben's Politics of the  
Remnant
Dr Matteo Mandarini (Lecturer in Management in the Cultural  
Industries, Queen Mary University, University of London): Not Fear But  
Hope in the Apocalyspse
Dr Alberto Toscano (Lecturer in Sociology, Goldsmiths College,  
University of London):Abstract Life: The Biopolitical Logic of  
Capitalism and Empire
Dr Margherita Pascucci (Marie Curie Fellow, English Department, Royal  
Holloway, University of London / New York University): The Real  
Richness: Politics and the Subject
Ozren Pupovac (Researcher in Sociology, Open University / Jan van Eyck  
Academie, Maastricht, The Netherlands): Machiavelli, Negri, Althusser:  
Encounters and Detours
Dr Shane Weller (Reader in Comparative Literature, University of  
Kent): The Art and Ethics of Distortion: Heidegger, Derrida, Vattimo
Dr Lorenzo Chiesa (Lecturer in Critical Theory, University of Kent):  
Homo Sacer: A Franciscan Ontology


More details and registration form: http://www.kent.ac.uk/secl/italian/news/index.html
Provisional Program: Conference Programme (Provisional) and Abstracts


Please feel free to circulate widely.



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