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*Rethinking crisis, resistance and strategy*

*Historical Materialism Athens Conference*

*2-5 May 2019*

*Panteion University of Political and Social Sciences*

In cooperation with the Department of Social Policy, Panteion University
Athens





*CALL FOR PAPERS*



In the past years Greece became a case-study not only for the dynamics of
the combined crisis of neoliberal capitalism and the European Integration,
but also for the possibility of mass movements and resistances to
drastically alter the political balance of forces. However, subsequent
developments also brought to the fore another crisis: the crisis of left
strategy, exemplified in the defeat of the struggles and aspirations of the
subaltern classes in Greece; in the inability to produce a radical
alternative to the neoliberal European Integration and in the aggressive
return of the xenophobic far right in its various forms.

These developments underline the need to open up once again the theoretical
debate regarding the capitalist crisis, the forms of bourgeois hegemony,
and the form of a potential hegemonic project of the subaltern classes.
They underline the need for a return to Marxist theory and historical
materialism in order to conceptualize and problematize the new forms of
crisis, resistance and hegemony.

This calls for an attempt to answer crucial theoretical (and political)
questions:

What are the character and the manifestations of the capitalist crisis? How
it is linked to the current forms of rivalry and antagonism in the
international plane? What forms does the crisis of European Union take? How
do recent developments, from the authoritarian turn in the Spanish State in
regards to the Catalan independence movement to the rise of far right
authoritarian governments in countries such as Hungary relate to the
broader pattern of political crisis?

What kind of movements and struggles have experienced during the crisis
period? What new forms and practices of resistance and organization have
emerged? Which has been the role of youth in recent movements? How do we
create new forms of unity and common struggle with refugees and migrants,
and more generally with the diverse subjects of oppression and
emancipation? What does the expansion of the state of emergency mean
regarding struggles for democracy and social and political rights?

How can we revisit the question of the state and state power in the light
of the developments in countries such as Greece? Is it possible for a ‘left
government’ to be part of a radical socialist strategy or it will lead to
capitulation?  How can we learn from other experiences such as the Latin
American ‘pink tide’? Is it possible to rethink today the possibility of a
revolutionary road?

What is the role of theory in the attempt to deal with these questions?
What forms of collective research can we think of? How can we combine the
openness of the debate with the militant commitment to struggle?

In contrast to traditional political debates, marked by a combination of
empiricism and dogmatism, in order to produce contemporary radical answers
we need solid theoretical research and dialogue. Historical Materialism and
the Marxist tradition, in all its complexity and richness offer the
necessary starting point. 200 years after the birth of Karl Marx we need a
new wave of Marxist theoretical research, associated with the crucial
questions of our times; the “urgent tasks of our movement”.

It is in light of the above questions that we undertake the initiative to
launch this Call for Papers for the first Historical Materialism Conference
to be held in Athens (2-5 May 2019) based upon the basic guiding threads of
Historical Materialism Conferences. We strongly encourage proposals on all
potential subjects associated with the main thematic of the conference but
also on questions associated with overall Marxist theory and Historical
Materialist research.

Separate Call for Stream Papers on migration/refugee crisis, political
ecology, Marxist feminism, philosophy, and political crisis will be issued
separately (see below).

The language of the conference will be English. The conference is open to
proposals for panels and papers on any subject within the central thematic
of this Call for Papers, and Call for Stream Papers, but also within the
purview of Marxist and left radical thought and politics. Each proposal
must include a title for the paper, an abstract of up to 400 words, names,
affiliations and contact details of the person(s) making the proposal. In
the case of panel proposals please include abstracts and contact details
for each presentation. We reserve the right to reject certain abstracts in
such panels (i.e. these are not “take it or leave it” as a whole) and to
reconstitute the panels in different ways where necessary.





*CALL FOR STREAM PAPERS*



*In search of a Marxist practice of philosophy*

Recently there has been a renewed interest regarding the relation of
philosophy to Marxism and Historical Materialism. Questions about the
relationship of Marxism to the philosophical tradition, the possibility of
a Marxist philosophy or a materialist practice of philosophy, the very
meaning of materialism have come to the fore. From new readings of
classical debates within Marxism (the possibility or not of a distinct
‘dialectical materialism’, the relationship of Marx to Hegel and the
philosophical tradition, the possibility or non possibility of a Marxist
ethics), to the new readings of Gramsci, Lukács, the Frankfurt School,
Althusser, the new dialogues with Foucault, Deleuze and Guattari, and the
controversies surrounding ‘New Materialism’, there are many examples of the
lively character of philosophical debates within contemporary Marxism.

In light of the above we encourage presentations and panel proposals
related to these questions and in particular (yet not exclusively) to the
following themes:

⎼ New Marxist dialogues with the philosophical tradition, from Machiavelli,
to Spinoza and Hegel

⎼ Materialisms ‘old’ and ‘new’

⎼ ‘Philosophy of Praxis’ and the significance of Gramsci for contemporary
philosophical debates

⎼ Althusser, materialism of the encounter and the open question of a new
practice of philosophy

⎼ Foucault, Deleuze, Guattari and the possible dialogue with Marxism



*Marxist Feminism and gender movements in times of crisis*

The social condition of the vast majority of women has worsened because of
the strengthening of conservative and far-right forces worldwide. The
socio-economic crisis has been used as a pretext for further abusing
women’s rights and denouncing equal rights struggles as ‘luxury’ in front
of insurmountable problems. We are thus facing a tendency to return to the
darkest pages of patriarchy: murders of women and LGBTQI+ persons, rapes,
domestic violence, legitimization of sexist and homophobic hate speech,
institutional legitimization of inequality (see the anti-abortion laws,
etc.). What’s more, women, being either the largest percentage of workers
in ‘off the books’ or precarious jobs (see, for example, migrant,
uninsured, semi-employed women) or paid less for equal work, remain the
biggest victims of the crisis. And, of course, the objectification of the
female body never stops in the cultural industry and beyond.

Nevertheless, in the public sphere voices for equal rights and women’s
empowerment are gaining ground. At the same time, feminist movements,
contradictory yet of great intensity and range, are re-emerging worldwide,
from #MeΤoo and Ni Una Menos to the International Woman’s Strike.
Alongside, feminist researches in theory are proliferating either regarding
the field of women and gender studies or the attempts which propose
feminism as a theoretical and methodological reference point for philosophy
and social theory.

In light of the above, we welcome papers that cover (but are not restricted
to) the following themes:

⎼ Aspects of the exploitation of women and LGBTQI+ today

⎼ Feminist and queer movements and initiatives worldwide

⎼ Neoliberal and radical feminism

⎼ Queer politics

⎼ Marxist feminism theorizations of economy and social reproduction

⎼ Feminism and/in culture



*‘Marx on earth’: Ecology, climate change, socio-environmental movements
and radical political praxis*

The global crisis of accumulation has produced a significant shift in value
generation. Capital accumulation based on labor exploitation is shifting to
highly diverse types of accumulation by dispossession, the commodification
of nature and enclosure of the commons. Despite urgent warnings about
climate change, capital still invests heavily in fossil fuel. Land
grabbing, resources extraction, mega-development projects all over the
world remain central aspects of capitalist accumulation and terrains of
conflicts and struggles. In this framework and despite decades of
intellectual and political challenge and deconstruction, the concept of
"development" remains central for the ways by which states seek to
legitimize these socio-ecological reconfigurations.

We welcome contributions that critically examine the contradictory
discourses and tactics through which capital seek to de-politicize nature’s
commodification and enclosure. Furthermore, we welcome considerations and
attempts that seek to present and analyze strategies that nurture a
politics of possibility for alternative socio-ecological futures contingent
on specific historical geographies, power relations, ideologies, cultures
and everyday life.



*'Everyone who is here is from here': Rethinking migrant/refugee movements*

In a period of rising racism and xenophobia, it is crucial to rethink the
terms ‘migrants’, ‘refugees’, ‘refugee crisis’. The figure of the
migrant/refugee is at the center of recent political and philosophical
debates. Questions of citizenship, class, nation, race and gender are newly
examined in the light of migrant/refugee movements, border controls, human
tragedies and new spaces of resistance. From refugee accommodation and
solidarity centers to labour organizing and anti – racism, there is a wide
range of worldwide militant responses. At the same time critical scholars
and activists have developed new terms and concepts that fill-out the
contemporary problematic of migration.

We welcome presentations and panel proposals that contribute to the
following:

⎼ Critical methodologies: Militant investigation projects

⎼ Border struggles, solidarity practices and NGO politics

⎼ Gramscian perspectives on migration and social alliances

⎼ Resisting islamophobia

⎼ Misplaced alliances:  Anti-immigrant positions among the left and trade
unions



*The return of the unheard: rethinking the current political crisis*

The period 2011-2016 a global movement of protest, contestation and
reclaiming of public space took place that shook the political status quo
in countries so diverse such as the U.S., Brazil, Turkey, Greece, Egypt and
Spain. Centering on issues of equality, representativeness and democratic
accountability these movements aspired to give voice and even power to vast
social majorities that are currently squeezed under the tight grip of
various forms of authoritarian neoliberalisms. Exhausted or political
defeated in most cases this cycle of protest no doubt left an indelible
mark in the hopes and aspirations of millions; it advanced new forms of
popular participation and collective action; and posed center stage the
immanent contradiction between democracy-cum-popular sovereignty and
neoliberal capitalism.

In light of the above we encourage presentations and panel proposals
related to the following questions:

⎼ The crisis of democratic capitalism in light of the Great Recession

⎼ New forms of popular organization and the question of dual power in the
21st century

⎼ The multitude vs the people, popular spontaneity vs hegemony

⎼ The rising specter of authoritarian neoliberalism; characteristics and
responses





*The deadline for paper / abstract proposals has been extended to December
31, 2018. *

*Submit your abstracts at: www.historicalmaterialismathens2019.net/submit
<http://www.historicalmaterialismathens2019.net/submit>*





*Historical Materialism Athens Conference*

*2-5 May 2019*

*Panteion University of Political and Social Sciences*

*w: historicalmaterialismathens2019.net
<http://historicalmaterialismathens2019.net/>*

*f: @historicalmaterialismathens*

*e: [log in to unmask]
<[log in to unmask]>*



-- 

*Giorgos Velegrakis*
MEng Electrical and Computer Engineering

MSc Environment and Development

MSc Urban and Regional Planning

PhD in Geography - Political Ecology

Academia page <https://hua.academia.edu/GiorgosVelegrakis>

Researchgate page <https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Giorgos_Velegrakis>



-- 

*Giorgos Velegrakis*
MEng Electrical and Computer Engineering

MSc Environment and Development

MSc Urban and Regional Planning

PhD in Geography - Political Ecology

Academia page <https://hua.academia.edu/GiorgosVelegrakis>

Researchgate page <https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Giorgos_Velegrakis>

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