Dear Colleagues,
Please find below details of the following workshop:
The Nature, Role, and Significance of Uptake
University of Vienna (Neues Institutsgebäude), 15-16 September 2022
Speakers:
Quill Kukla, Guy Longworth, Maximilian de Gaynesford, Jeremy Wanderer, Laura
Caponetto, Lucy McDonald, Grace Paterson, Sarah Fisher, Leo Townsend
Description:
In How to Do Things With Words, JL Austin famously linked the performance of
illocutionary acts with uptake, writing: Unless a certain effect is
achieved, the illocutionary act will not have been happily, successfully
performed [
] I cannot be said to have warned an audience unless it hears
what I say and takes what I say in a certain sense. An effect must be
achieved on the audience if the illocutionary act is to be carried out. How
should we put it best here? And how should we limit it? Generally the effect
amounts to bringing about the understanding of the meaning and of the force
of the locution. So the performance of an illocutionary act involves the
securing of uptake.
These somewhat vague, hesitant remarks have spawned a number of debates
within subsequent speech act theory about the character and function of
uptake. What is the precise nature of uptake? Should it be understood in
psychological terms (perhaps as the audiences beliefs about the intentions
of the speaker), or should it be construed in more social and normative
terms (perhaps as the normative effect of the speech act on the relevant
social situation)? What role, if any, does uptake play in the performance of
illocutionary acts? Is uptake simply the characteristic goal of
illocutionary acts, or is securing uptake a necessary condition for their
performance? Alternatively is uptake a sufficient but not necessary
condition of the performance of illocutionary acts? Might there be some
illocutionary acts whose performance depends on uptake, while others do not?
Finally, what is the broader political significance of uptake? How does
uptake relate to practices of silencing, discursive injustice, and epistemic
injustice? This workshop investigates these and related questions about the
nature, role, and function of uptake.
Registration:
In order to ensure compliance with COVID-related seating arrangements,
spaces are limited and registration is required. To register, email Leo
Townsend: leo.townsend(a)univie.ac.at <mailto:leo.townsend@univie.ac.at>
Contact:
For more information, contact Leo Townsend (leo.townsend(a)univie.ac.at
<mailto:leo.townsend@univie.ac.at> )
Organisers:
Leo Townsend and Sarah Fisher
The workshop is supported by the Austrian Science Fund project Giving
groups a proper say (FWF project number P33682-G)
All best wishes,
Sarah
Dr. Sarah Fisher
Postdoctoral Researcher/ Coordinator of the Vienna Doctoral School of
Philosophy
University of Vienna
Universitätsstraße 7/3 (Neues Institutsgebäude)
1010 Wien