CFP: Is Nationalism Obsolete? Workshop, Kosovo (July 1-12th, 2019)

IS NATIONALISM OBSOLETE?
Prishtina, Kosovo (July 1-12th, 2019).
Deadline for submissions: February 15th, 2019.
For more info: www.balkansocietytp.com

The goal of this workshop, which will be held in Prishtina, Kosova, in the summer of 2019 (July 1-12th), is to explore if nationalism is obsolete. Is it capable of meeting, or even addressing, the issues of our time?

In “National Independence: The Only Possible Outcome,” Frantz Fanon argues that the French public opinion is no—nationalism is strictly a regression. For example, the French public views Algerian nationalism as extremist, backwards, and anti-progress. That definition aligns with the way nationalism is generally discussed today in relation to far-right parties, Islamophobia, Anti-semitism, the desire to establish a “Christian Europe,” whiteness, and Eurocentricity.

Nationalism is understood to align the past, present, and future in a timeless continuity, thus reducing to a threat all “external” elements, such as immigration and global capitalism. Nationalism is understood to be furthered by strict immigration policies, euroscepticism, and anti-globalization, among others. The Economist even coined the term “New Nationalism” to denote contemporary nationalism as inherently anti-globalization. This new nationalism is understood to necessitate a rejuvenation of national pride, which supposedly has been wounded in the international scene. Besides “New Nationalism,” new terms like “Trumpism” are employed to denote specific formations of nationalism today.

Authoritarian populism, national movements, Trumpism, Brexit, are all read as challenges to the global community. These movements (examples often include Russia, Turkey, India, Austria, Sweden, to name a few) are thought to be products of populist leaders who mobilize people against foreign influence, thus creating the conditions for the emergence of authoritarian tendencies and extreme national ideologies. In response, people turn their backs to international institutions and the ideal of global unity. In other words, nationalism is placed in direct conflict with democratic capitalism.

The popular understanding of nationalism obfuscates its revolutionary potential.

  • First, conflation of terms like “nationalism,” “populism,” “right-wing,” and “fascism,” has given space to reactionary voices to claim nationalism as fascism with another name.
  • Second, there is a lack of serious engagement with demands for nationalist strategies because such strategies are seen as relics of the past. Specifically, nationalism is seen to have failed alongside anti-colonial wars and socialist projects.
  • Third, nationalism, which cannot be disarticulated from the nation-state model, appears anachronistic in our increasingly globalized world. With globalization and the demise of traditional colonization, nationalism signifies, to the liberal mind, only a backwardness that should have been replaced with transnationalism. It should be understood that these narratives of nationalism are very different from those developed by formerly colonized countries, for whom nationalism was often a strategic feature of decolonization.

Examples of revolutionary nationalism are: Vietnam; Black nationalism internal to the United States (e.g., Black Panther Party, Black Liberation Army); numerous African nationalist movements including Algeria, Guinea-Bissau, Cape Verde, Angola, and Mozambique; numerous South American nationalist movements including Venezuela, Chile, Colombia, and Peru; and nationalist movements among First Nations Populations in the Americas which have lasted centuries. Given BSTP’s orientation toward the Balkans, we seek to consider these nationalist movements alongside those that have emerged prior to and after the dissolution of Yugoslavia.

We welcome papers from all disciplines that deal with the question of nationalism.

Topics and questions to consider may include, but are not limited to:

1) How can we understand nationalism in Eastern Europe, both in terms of nationalist colonial projects (such as the movement for “Greater Serbia”) and in terms of anti-colonial and anti-imperialist nationalist struggles?

2) How can we understand Kosovar nationalism? Is the work of Gani Bobi (e.g.,“The Context of Self-Culture” and “Trials of Modernity”) still relevant to understand Kosovar nationalism

3) Can nationalism be liberatory?

4) How does the media shape our understandings of nationalism? Does it nurture an understanding of nationalism as extremist? If yes, how does it affect territorially and ethnically divided societies, like the case of Mitrovica?

5) What is the relationship between nation and literature? What is the role of literature in challenging nationalist projects (e.g., Rosario Castellano’s work)?

6) Places and peoples at the margins of the national center (e.g. Édouard Glissant’s work).

7) What is the role of art in nationalism (e.g., the role of music in national anthems or the integration of pop music into national events and political rallies)?

8) How can we articulate the specificity of nationalism in the postcolonial context?

9) Pan–African nationalism

10) What is the relationship between nationalism and globalization?

11) What is the relationship between nationalism and communism?

12) Indigenous nationalism/ Mestiza nationalism

13) Marx and Engels on nationalism and internationalism

14) How have Rosa Luxemburg, Lenin, Subaltern Studies, Latin American studies addressed the question of nationalism?

15) Feminism and Nationalism (e.g. the work of Kumari Jayawardena)

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We invite submissions to the workshop by ***February 15th, 2019***

To apply, please submit your CV or portfolio, a 250-word abstract, and a 250-word personal statement indicating how your research relates to the workshop theme. Anyone working on decolonial and postcolonial theory, race theory, disability studies, queer theory, feminism, aesthetics, philosophy, sociology, history, critical theory and political theory in general is encouraged to apply. We highly encourage activists, journalists, and artists to apply, even if your work is not in the form of a traditional paper.

Please do not submit published work. All papers/projects should be works in progress, open to development in response to feedback.

Email submissions to: BALKANSOCIETYTP@GMAIL.COM

When & Where: July 1st-12th, 2019, in Prishtina, Kosovo.

Eligibility: This workshop is open to anyone who is interested with the requisite background, including activists, artists, independent researchers, and academics (e.g., graduate students, post-docs, junior faculty).

Program Fees (fees INCLUDE lodging for the entire duration of the workshop, lunch during workshop days, and an opening reception):

50 for Kosovar citizens who do not require lodging;
100 euro for Kosovar citizens who require lodging;
225 euros for students, independent researchers, non-affiliated organizers/activists, and artists;
325 euros for students and activists with organizational backing;
375 euros for tenured or tenure-track faculty.

Workshop Format
The workshop will be a collaborative space for sharing and workshopping research projects. Papers should be works in progress, open to development in response to feedback. Participants will be asked to share their papers before we gather in Prishtina. This will ensure that each participant has had sufficient time to review the material. The workshop format will consist of a 20-25 minute presentation of the key points discussed in the paper, followed by a general discussion, questions, and feedback from the group. We will discuss two papers per day, reserving approximately 2 hours per paper.

Other Events:
Evening programs will include screenings of films and documentaries, as well as parties with local music/musicians;
Space: Kino Armata
Language: The workshop will take place in English.