Hi everyone!
A detailed schedule for the Rethinking Inheritance conference on Saturday, April 28, 2012 has been posted! Please check it out here.
Hi everyone!
A detailed schedule for the Rethinking Inheritance conference on Saturday, April 28, 2012 has been posted! Please check it out here.
We have extended our deadline to February 24th!!
How to Submit: Email submissions, 300-500 word statement, and, if you are including an object or prompt, a picture or description to inheritanceconference@gmail.com by February 24th, 2012. Please also include your full name, academic affiliation, and a current CV in the email.
We are excited and honored to announce our speakers for The New School for Social Research’s Rethinking Inheritance gathering on April 28, 2012!
Keynote Speaker: Gil Anidjar (Religion/MESAAS, Columbia)
To launch our active and dialogue-driven efforts to rethink and reimagine inheritance, Gil Anidjar will offer some of his own creative and critical thoughts.
Closing Remarks: Miguel Robles-Durán (Urban Design, Parsons The New School for Design)
To close the event, Miguel Robles-Durán will reflect on ideas and experiences that emerged over the course of the day as conference participants moved through the exhibition of inheritance-inspired “objects.”
Interested? Read our Call for Participants and make your submission to inheritanceconference@gmail.com by February 20th, 2012.
Thank you!
The
New
School
for
Social
Research
2012
Anthropology
Conference:
“Rethinking
Inheritance”
April
28th,
2012
The Theme: Inheritance has typically been conceived as a passive process of reception. Yet, inheritance also implies claims to something. Claiming inheritance and claiming selves, communities, nations and other units as heirs is an active practice. How can we better conceptualize the labor involved in establishing inheritance? How are inheritances rejected, resisted, renewed, reformed, or renegotiated? How are identity and belonging implicated in inheritance?
As we begin to think of inheritance in multiple registers, we hope to challenge its supposed passivity and expand its conceptualization. What does it mean to inherit a citizenship, a nationality, a legal framework, or an ethnicity, and what are the modes for these inheritances? How can inheritance be employed to think through temporal relationships of historical consciousness, collective memory, and their narration? We also hope to think together about how active inheritance relates to materialities and economies, financial institutions, and the act of making claims on properties, whether virtual or physical. Similarly, we can consider inheritance in terms of spaces and boundaries, wondering how territories are passed down and how borders are maintained.
Seeking: Participants who are engaged in creative and critical rethinking of inheritance in ways that may include, but certainly are not limited to the ideas above. As part of this process, we are reimagining the conference format that we have inherited as scholars. Rather than curating panels in which participants read papers, we seek an active, dialogue‐driven event featuring multiple conversations through which attendees can move, beginning with a keynote address from an innovative scholar, and closing with a second address that reflects on what we have thought and experienced in the course of the day. To prompt discussion and encourage an expansion of the mediums with and through which we think inheritance, we encourage submissions of “objects” (including, but not limited to, physical objects, artifacts, short film clips, photographs, texts, games, artwork, music/sound, and performance) alongside a brief 300‐500 word statement explaining your choice of “object” and how it relates to our theme. When selecting participants, we will primarily be looking for innovative ideas that identify a ”site” of inquiry that attendees will engage with during the event. We are NOT looking for finished papers or solidified arguments. Rather, your submitted “object” will inspire new questions and interventions targeting inheritance. Selected participants will attend the event, informally present their “object” as it relates to Rethinking Inheritance, and take part in workshop conversations.
How to Submit: Email submissions, 300‐500 word statement, and, if you are including an object or prompt, a picture or description to inheritanceconference@gmail.com by February 20th, 2012. Please also include your full name, academic affiliation, and a current CV in the email.
*A general conference announcement for attendees will be issued in late February.
Welcome to the blog for The New School for Social Research’s Anthropology Conference 2012. We are excited to announce this year’s theme: Rethinking Inheritance. In the months to come, we will use this blog to help generate ideas and provide information about the schedule and logistics of the conference.