Dear all,
We are happy to invite you to the first APSE (Applied Philosophy of
Science and Epistemology) lecture of the semester, with a talk by
Gurminder K. Bhambra (University of Sussex).
Title: Critical Theory and the Need for a Political Economy of
Colonialism
When/Where: Thursday, 14th of November, 3-5 pm, ONLINE!
You can join the event via the following Zoom link:
https://univienna.zoom.us/j/69090163424?pwd=Y2JCxwmd7L88U1OPOLw7OCrGuuxZIe.1
Abstract:
Frankfurt School critical theory is grounded in a theory of capitalist
modernity which, in common with wider sociological approaches, elides
histories of colonialism. This results in a misdiagnosis of current
problems of inequality and inadequate solutions for their address. Many
critical theorists, for example, focus primarily on issues of
redistribution associated with a capital-labour relation organised
nationally and now seen to be threatened by globalisation and migration.
Such an understanding fails to account for how the decommodification of
labour through the development of national welfare arrangements in the
West – an explicit issue for critical theory from Habermas's
"Legitimation Crisis" onward – has been bound to wider colonial
histories and, specifically, colonial patrimonies. A proper address of
these issues requires a more expansive approach to distributive justice
conducted in a reparative frame that recognizes the ways in which the
legacies of our shared, but asymmetrically experienced, colonial pasts
continue to configure the present and its possibilities. It involves
making colonial histories central to understandings of capitalist
modernity and to the normative address of inequalities that otherwise
risk being legitimated by the standard accounts of critical theory. In
this talk, I take issue with the central conceptualisation of modern
society as capitalist at its core, and the way in which capitalism is
understood separately from colonialism. I further question the implicit
nationalism of critical theory and argue that what is missing from it is
a political economy of colonialism.
Please feel free to share this invitation with anyone who might be
interested.
All details can also to be found here:
https://apse.univie.ac.at/news-events/detailsansicht/news/critical-theory-a…
Best wishes,
Irene Salzmann (on behalf of the APSE unit)