Sensational Marxisms: Towards a Communism of the Senses
Call for papers - AAG 2011
Session organisers - Alex Loftus (Royal Holloway, University of London) and
Erik Swyngedouw (University of Manchester)
Liberating ourselves from the horrors of the present requires an artistic
and sensuous imagination that will be transformed in the coming of a future
society. Sensuous experience is the raw material from which a revolutionary
project might be realised. Equally, sensuous experience provokes new forms
of political subjectivity. This is at the heart of Ranciere's understanding
of "the distribution of the sensible" and the relationship he theorises
between politics and aesthetics. It might also be traced to other threads of
Marxist thought. In part inspired by Epicurus, Marx thought deeply about
relational sensuousness. He clearly also understood this through an artistic
model (as Lefebvre claimed, Marx "imagines a society in which everyone
would...perceive the world through the eyes of an artist, enjoy the sensuous
through the eyes of a painter, the ears of a musician and the language of a
poet").
Discussions of affect and the affective within Geography have rarely
included such considerations. Nevertheless, emerging practices within a
relational and post-relational aesthetics (Bourriaud 2002) have drawn
significantly from new communist theory (Badiou, Zizek, Nancy) and
reconnected with Marx's theorisation of the senses (Roberts 2009). For
Toscano (2008), this places the question of a "communism of the senses"
within an understanding of both aesthetic and marxist thought. At the same
time, with the publication of Merrifield's (2011) Magical Marxism, we have
been challenged to think more freely about the positive foundations on which
we struggle for radical change. As Merrifield writes: "Politics more than
anything needs the magical touch of dream and desire, needs the shock of the
poetic".
This session will explore the role of poetics and sensuousness within
politics and emerging communist geographies. Possible topics are:
· The role of the senses in an "inaugural communism"
· Marxist thought and relational sensuousness
· Politics, aesthetics and the new communist theory
· Magical, sensational marxisms
· The Politics of the Senses
· The Communist Imaginary today
· Sensuous communist geographies
· Emerging Communist Geographies
If you are interested in participating, please contact either Alex Loftus
([log in to unmask]) or Erik Swyngedouw
([log in to unmask]).
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