Liebe Kolleg:innen,
Anbei darf ich Sie auf einen CfP zur politischen Philosophie von Cornelius Castoriadis
aufmerksam machen.
Mit besten Grüßen
Sergej Seitz
Call for Papers
Democracy and Radical Imagination: Castoriadis Revisited
International Workshop
University of Vienna, Department of Political Science
May 25-26, 2023
Organized by Sara Gebh & Sergej Seitz | ERC Research Project Prefiguring Democratic
Futures
That democracy is in crisis is a truism today. In recent years, many commentators have
identified the disintegration of truth and facts as the core threat to democratic
societies, and accordingly call for restoring our political sense of reality. In turn,
this workshop proceeds from the conviction that we face at least as severe a crisis of our
political sense of possibility: a crisis of political imagination. It has become
increasingly difficult to even imagine democratic politics and democratic futurity
differently, that is, significantly departing from the status quo of the minimal model of
present, liberal western democracy. The infamous TINA dictum emblematically attests to the
outright rejection of political creativity under the hegemony of neoliberal capitalism.
While democratic creativity withers away, progressive change seems to be outsourced to the
field of technology, in terms of planned and anticipable ‘innovation’. This is all the
more fatal in times of ecological disaster, where democratic political action is
increasingly challenged by calls for establishing ‘authoritarian environmentalism’, often
accompanied with technocratic ideas of climate engineering.
To explore paths for restoring and enlivening political imagination and our political
sense of possibility, it seems apt to (re)turn to the work of Cornelius Castoriadis.
Nearly half a century after the publication of his magnum opus The Imaginary Institution
of Society (1975), it is not only time to take stock and evaluate the relevance and
productivity of his political philosophy for present discussions. Rather, with his
distinctive account of democracy as autonomous self-institution and his notion of radical
imagination at the heart of the political, Castoriadis’s thought may deliver conceptual
tools and theoretical frameworks that help foster new, radical democratic imaginaries.
Against this background, the workshop proposes to revisit the work of Castoriadis in order
to explore how, to what extent, and in which respects it can be utilized or updated for
tackling the crisis of imagination. To this end, the workshop convenes interdisciplinary
participants from philosophy, political science, and sociology, rallying around the main
question of whether Castoriadis’s thinking allows us to establish a notion of democratic
imagination and/or democratic imaginaries fit for the challenges of the present.
Central Questions
1. Theorizing Democratic Imaginaries: Recently, there has been a lot of research on
different types of imaginaries, as for instance the broad discourse on ‘socio-technical
imaginaries’ in science and technology studies. Following Castoriadis, we propose to
explore the notion of ‘democratic imaginaries’: What are the components of a democratic
imaginary? How can a specifically democratic imaginary be distinguished from other kinds
of political imagination? In what ways can a democratic imaginary be revived, and how does
it have to be adapted, in times of (political, ecological, military, pandemic) crises?
2. Rethinking History as Creation: Based on Castoriadis’s critique of a Marxist theory
of history, we invite contributions that investigate his view of history as ‘creation and
destruction’. What is the role of the past in creating alternative visions of the future?
How can we acknowledge history as made and always in-the-making without rendering its
meaning fully contingent? What are the hidden potentials of conceiving the history of
ideas, specifically, not as an unambiguous recounting of the past, but as a resource for
keeping alive the self-instituting impulse of society?
3. Widening (Counter-)Institutional Imagination: Castoriadis decidedly opposes
functionalist theories of political institutions. Instead of analyzing institutions merely
in terms of their instrumental rationality and stabilizing function, he points us towards
the ways in which institutions incorporate, reflect, and reproduce imaginary meanings. In
this vein, we want to ask—empirically and theoretically—how both established institutions
as well as activist counter-institutions constrain and expand the horizon of political
imagination. What kinds of concrete institutions or institutional features widen our sense
of possibility today?
Format
We strive towards creating a true workshop-atmosphere that allows for a serious,
productive, and collaborative engagement with each other’s work. Workshop participants
send in working papers (approx. 5000 words) in advance (deadline: April 30, 2023) and each
participant prepares a commentary on one of the other papers. Each session begins with a
brief opening statement by the author(s) on the background of the text (5 min), followed
by a commentary (10 min) that opens the general discussion of the text.
Venue and Accommodation
The workshop will take place in-person at the University of Vienna. Online participation
is not possible. There is no participation fee. The organizers are happy to give
recommendations regarding travel arrangements. In individual cases, assistance with travel
expenses may be provided.
Publication
We plan to publish the workshop’s proceedings as a special issue in a peer-reviewed
journal and/or in an edited volume.
Timeline
Submission deadline: December 31, 2022
Communication of results: January 31, 2023
Deadline for working papers: April 30, 2023
Submission & Contact
Please send your application with an abstract of max. 500 words and a brief biographical
note to sara.gebh@univie.ac.at<mailto:sara.gebh@univie.ac.at> and
sergej.seitz@univie.ac.at<mailto:sergej.seitz@univie.ac.at>. For any questions
regarding the CfP, please contact both Sara Gebh and Sergej Seitz.
Web:
https://www.academia.edu/90816767/CfP_Democracy_and_Radical_Imagination_Cas…
Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the
author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or European
Research Council (erc). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held
responsible for them.