糖心TV

Skip to main content Skip to navigation

Culture and Global Responsibility: Rethinking Habitability in the Age of the Anthropocene

  Conference Programme

(updated 11/05/2023)

An International & Interdisciplinary Conference

12-14 May 2023, University of 糖心TV
The Oculus, /

Programme includes a film screening and virtual Q and A which will take place in the Faculty of Arts Cinema.

Confirmed Invited Speakers:

  • Emily Baker (UCL)
  • Stef Craps (Ghent University)
  • Martin Crowley (University of Cambridge)
  • Esther Figueroa (Independent researcher and filmmaker)
  • Tiago de Luca (University of 糖心TV)
  • Rashmi Varma (University of 糖心TV)

Organised by:

Stefano Bellin (University of 糖心TV), Guido Bartolini (Ghent University), and Michael Niblett (University of 糖心TV)

Call for Papers

Although the world seems to be drifting towards the conflictual opposition between large geopolitical blocs, and the pandemic and the war in Ukraine have reshaped the dynamics of globalisation, there is no doubt that many of the key issues of our time are global in nature and scope. Indeed, we could argue that the most important social and political battles of the twenty-first century are fought in the global arena. Climate change, international migrations, pandemics, neoliberal capitalist exploitation, racialised patterns of exclusion and discrimination, gentrification are just some of the global challenges that characterise our time. As Olu虂fe蹋虂mi O. Ta虂i虂wo虁 argues in Reconsidering Reparations, because slavery and colonialism fundamentally shaped the world we live in, we should be thinking more broadly and holistically about how to remake the world system. Moreover, since human beings have become a geophysical force capable of radically affecting the climate system of the planet as a whole, the 鈥榩lanetary鈥 is also emerging as an analytical category and as a matter of human concern. Indeed, as Dipesh Chakrabarty points out in The Climate of History in a Planetary Age, 鈥榠n our own awareness of ourselves, the 鈥渘ow鈥 of human history has become entangled with the long 鈥渘ow鈥 of geological and biological timescales, something that has never happened before in the history of humanity鈥 (p. 7). We therefore need to connect the planetary with the global, the geologic arc of the Anthropocene/Capitalocene with the time of human history and experience, with a particular attention to the colonial, racial, and gendered oppressions that link the human world to the vast processes and timescale of the Earth system.

Bringing together literary and cultural studies, art and film studies, critical race theory, environmental humanities, and philosophy, this international conference will explore how different cultural texts might facilitate our critical and political engagement with forms of violence and injustice that are global in nature and scope. Drawing connections between the concepts and the practices of 鈥榞lobal responsibility鈥 and 鈥榟abitability鈥, the conference will discuss how different natural, social, and cultural forces shape the habitability of different environments on Earth, as well as our individual and collective responsibility for making the world not just habitable but also compatible with the flourishing of different beings.

The key questions that this conference seeks to address are:

  • How can literature, film, and other forms of art help us to think through the notions of 鈥榞lobal responsibility鈥 and 鈥榟abitability鈥?
  • What makes the Earth habitable, and how does human culture, action and neglect affect that habitability?
  • To what extent and in what sense are we responsible for making the Earth a place where different forms of human and nonhuman life can live and thrive?
  • What are the conditions for a good life and how are these conditions represented in mass culture?
  • How and to what extent can cultural work challenge political and social structures of oppression?
  • How can different cultural texts and artistic media develop our political imagination and sense of responsibility?
  • How does the past influence habitability and life conditions in the present?
  • How do ongoing patterns of violence, injustice, and accumulation affect habitability and life鈥檚 capacity to flourish?
  • What does it take for life to survive and flourish?

This international conference welcomes scholars across the arts & humanities working in all geographical areas and theoretical frameworks, and encourages proposals that take an interdisciplinary or cross-disciplinary approach.

Suggested topics include (but are not restricted to):

  • Literature, film, art, philosophy and the question global responsibility
  • Critical perspectives on what makes an environment habitable sociologically, culturally, and ecologically
  • Intersectional analyses of 鈥榞lobal responsibility鈥 and 鈥榟abitability鈥
  • How the global racial empire affects 鈥榟abitability鈥 and 鈥榞lobal responsibility鈥
  • Cultural texts that address forms or patterns of injustice that are global in nature and scope
  • Cultural work, differentiated solidarity, and the challenge of 鈥榚lite capture鈥 (Ta虂i虂wo虁 2022)
  • Literature, film, art, philosophy and the struggle of 鈥榬emaking the world鈥 (Getachew 2019)

Registration

Registration for the conference has now closed.

An updated PDF of the conference programme can be downloaded using the link on the left.

Application Process and Conference Fees

The organisers invite proposals for 20-minute presentations. We strongly encourage attending the conference in-person, but in a limited number of cases it might be possible to make arrangements for an online presentation.

Please send a 300-word (approximately) abstract, contact details and a brief bio by 10 February 2023 to globalresponsibility2023@gmail.com

Please note: there will be a standard fee of 拢30 to help defray catering and room booking costs. ECRs (up to 5 years after the end of the PhD) and staff on a temporary contract will be charged a reduced fee of 拢20, while postgraduates and the unwaged can participate in the conference for free.

This conference has been made possible thanks to the kind and generous support of the Habitability Global Research Priority (GRP) and the Humanities Research Centre (HRC)Link opens in a new window at the University of 糖心TV.

Humanities Research Centre logo

Let us know you agree to cookies