b2o: boundary 2 online

Category: Lectures and Talks

  • The Humanities and Neurosciences

    b2 took its first steps towards organizing symposia, lectures, and publications on The Humanities and Neurosciences. Lots of help from some distinguished Pittsburgh scientists and the visiting Wlad Godzich. More news to come, including a new page on this site.

  • Pseudophilia, Truthiness, and the University

    Image

    Wlad Godzich continued his series of lectures and seminars at Pitt on Tuesday evening with an important historical and theoretical analysis of truth, knowledge, the university, and the limitations of neoliberalism.

  • Audio Links to the Sovereignty Seminar of November 3, 2012 at the University of Pittsburgh

    Paul Amar, UC Santa Barbara/Cairo:   Triangulating New Prerogative Subjects in Egypt’s Brotherhood State, and the “Sha’abiya” of New Popular Sovereignty Alternatives

    and

    Wlad Godzich, UC Santa Cruz:  Sovereignty and University

    click this link

    Tony Bogues, Brown University:   Popular Sovereignty and the Practices of Freedom: Or How Do We Make a New Beginning? Notes towards working through a Conundrum

    Ronald Judy, University of Pittsburgh:   Restless Freedom and the sources (masādir) of siyāda sha’abiya: the Tunisian Question

  • Wlad Godzich at Pitt

    Coinciding with the time of the b2 editorial board meeting and conference, Wlad Godzich will present two additional lectures:

    Friday, November 2, 2012 2 PM, “Conceptions of the Human, Conceptions of the Humanities,” 35th floor of the Cathedral of Learning, University of Pittsburgh sponsored with the Undergraduate Honors College.

    Tuesday, November 6, 2012, “Pseudophilia, Truthiness, and the University,” The Humanities Center of the University of Pittsburgh, room 602 Cathedral of Learning.

  • Call for Papers: ACLA

    Ruth Hung has asked that we post this CFP for the ACLA of 2011.  If you are interested, please contact Ruth at ruthhung@hkbu.edu.hk or check the ACLA Website at http://www.acla.org/acla2011.  Thanks.

    The panel invites comparatists to reflect on the spectral aesthetics of state power, to investigate how it colonizes a population’s mind, limits its imaginative possibilities, and yet creates new subject formations.  The Derridean word “specters” is a point of departure.  This seminar agrees that the spectral world of capital creates a “phantom State” and evacuates public spaces.  It departs from the “Cold War mentality,” reflected in Derrida, and sees the traffic between the U.S. and China as evidence of an emergent neoconservative world of state power and imaginative deprivation as one cause of the current crisis in thinking.  This seminar proposes that the way forward for a comparative critical humanist is to understand how state power, spectral and spectacular, now takes offense not, as during the cold war, at any one competing worldview but at the very root of the humanistic belief that the human’s desire to imagine and create alternative realities should know no limit.  Building on the study of earlier spectral forms —
    the novel, propaganda, and advertising — it seeks to understand how in most recent global media events, powerful states establish specters of their own insurmountable power to create new forms of subjectivity settled within consumerism, religion, and the passivity of the status quo.  These specters (such as the bombing of Baghdad, the opening ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics, the military parades at the People’s Republic of China’s 60th anniversary) also threaten violence against any imaginable alternatives to their own domination of the norms of life.

  • Tony Bogues Talking on the Human

    The
    first sentence was taken from a the words of a woman who was on a demonstration
    in cape town last week and was being arrested. She shouted at the police
    offier as she was being led away, "tell the minister  we are human
    too."

    "We Are Human Too"

  • PAB on Historical Humanism

    Historical Humanist, American Style

    First presented this talk at Harvard conference on Humanism from Florence to Beijing, coordinated by Lindsay Waters and David Wang.  Thanks to both.  Revised and presented twice more, once at Hong Kong University in June and then again to the International Association of University Professors tri-annual meeting in Malta, July 2010.

    This to offset editorial colleagues’ sometimes objections that I never publish in b2.