Dear all,
we are looking forward to your participation in the inaugural workshop
of the newly founded Critical Political Epistemology Network! Please
feel free to forward it to all those who could be interested.
Here is the call:
Call for Participation – Critical Political Epistemology Network
Inaugural Workshop on the 25th and 26th of May 2023
The goal of this workshop is to establish an international research
network to foster alliances in the field of critical political
epistemology (CPE). CPE analyzes how questions around knowledge, power,
governance, politics, oppression, and ignorance intersect, such as: How
do forms of political resistance generate collective knowledge? Who is
understood to be a political, epistemic agent? How do relations and
structures of power impact which and whose political interests become
knowable, and to whom? How do counter-knowledges create resistance to
oppression?
Potential topics of interest include but are not limited to:
• Social movements and activism
• The epistemic role, power, and authority of political parties
• Social categories and their impact on knowledge, ignorance, and power
• Marginalization and its effect on epistemic practices
• (Re-)Distribution of material and epistemic capital
These topics will be analyzed from different disciplinary perspectives.
As an inter- and transdisciplinary research network, CPE expands and
links questions, lines of inquiry, and methods in social and political
epistemology. We aim to bring together people from different epistemic
communities and focus on critical, non-ideal theorizing that is situated
in material and praxis-oriented analysis of prevailing epistemic and
political structures.
The workshop has two main goals. The first is to create an international
network for collaborative forms of knowledge production. Our hope is to
serve as a space to engage in epistemic practices that are not
exclusively centered around the individual nor confined to the
university. The second is to produce a statement of purpose that
delineates core questions and future aims of the CPE Network.
On the first day of the workshop, the coordinating committee – Melanie
Altanian (she/her, University College Dublin), Solmu Anttila (they/them,
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam), Stephanie Deig (she/they, Universität
Luzern), Flora Löffelmann (they/them, Universität Wien) and Sonja
Riegler (she/they, Universität Wien) – will present and invite feedback
on a preliminary statement of purpose for the CPE Network. We will then
form collaborative
working groups that explore the relation of different themes, questions,
and challenges. On the second day of the workshop, the results of these
groups will be collectively discussed and incorporated into the
statement of purpose. The resulting collaboratively written text will
provide a foundation for further work in this field.
We encourage applications from relevant subfields in philosophy that
include but are not limited to epistemology, political theory and
philosophy, critical theory, philosophy of language, phenomenology,
queer philosophy, and feminist philosophy. We also welcome applications
from the humanities and social sciences, e.g., sociology and social
theory, science and technology studies, critical race studies, gender
studies, discourse studies, history, decolonial and postcolonial
studies, genocide studies, legal studies, political economy, social
psychology, media and communication science, political science and art
history. We also strongly encourage activists, science communicators,
policy analysts, artists, educators, and others who are interested in
CPE to apply.
Please submit a CV and a short letter of motivation (approximately one
page) to cpenetwork(a)proton.me indicating how your research, political or
artistic work and/or everyday experience address pertinent questions in
CPE. We invite interested persons to apply by the 19th of March, 2023.
Accepted participants will be notified by the 4th of April, 2023. Travel
and accommodation funding up to € 200 is available for those who do not
have institutional support. Please indicate in your application if you
need financial assistance, and if it might exceed the funds available.
The organizers are committed to making this workshop an accessible space
and share the goal of dismantling the exclusionary mechanisms at work in
the field of academic philosophy. We especially encourage persons from
marginalized and underrepresented groups to apply, e.g. BIPoC, LGBTQAI+
people, economically marginalized people and disabled persons.
The workshop will take place in person on the 25th and 26th of May, 2023
at the Universität Wien. The venue is wheelchair accessible.
We thank the Vienna Doctoral School of Philosophy, the APSE Group, the
Institute of Philosophy (Universität Wien) and the Faculty of Social
Sciences and Humanities at the Universität Luzern for their financial
support.
--
Flora Löffelmann, BA Bakk. MA MA
they/them, for more info see:
https://www.mypronouns.org/what-and-why/
University assistant & doctoral candidate
Department of Philosophy at University of Vienna