How do the logos and its phenomenon relate? How does the logos itself appear? Is any articulation of the phenomenon possible?
We are currently welcoming submissions for the 3rd annual University of Sussex graduate conference in phenomenology. The themes of the last two years have been, respectively, the beginnings and the ends of phenomenology. This year the focus is on an ambiguous relationship at the core of phenomenology: the relationship between its basic parts, phenomenon and logos. We invite abstracts for papers that engage with phenomenology, and its fundamental structure, or engage phenomenologically. What is it to speak of phenomena and what is it, phenomenologically, to speak? We welcome abstracts for papers that criticize phenomenology, and/or engage constructively with it as a philosophical movement. By examining the rapport between phenomenology and its phenomenon we hope to reinvigorate the heart of phenomenology: a speaking of the phenomenon.
This conference provides the opportunity for graduate students to present for twenty minutes and receive questions and feedback for an additional twenty minutes each. The University of Sussex graduate conference in Phenomenology is a two-day conference, organized by graduate students for graduate students. It is organized as a single ‘stream’, ensuring that every speaker has the opportunity of addressing all delegates. We aim to bring together postgraduates engaging in original research on phenomenology and related branches of philosophy and to promote contemporary studies in this field.
Keynote speakers:
- Professor Miguel de Beistegui (University of Warwick)
- Professor Joanna Hodge (Manchester Metropolitan University)
Possible topics include but are not limited to:
- The relation between the phenomenon and phenomenology
- The operation of logos in phenomenology
- The structure of the phenomenal
- The compatibility of the phenomenological approach and its manner of articulation
- A phenomenological investigation of speaking; what is it to speak?
- Phenomenology and hermeneutics
- The role of motivation in or for phenomenology; phenomenology’s raison d’être
- Phenomenology and the arts
- Phenomenology and desire
- Phenomenology and psycho-analysis
- Phenomenology and science
- Phenomenology and Heideggerian ‘Thinking’
- Phenomenology and aesthetics
- Phenomenology and speculative materialism (the problem of correlationism)
- Phenomenology and archaeology
- Phenomenology and realism
- Khōra and phenomenology
- Phenomenology and testimony
Submissions:
Send 300 word abstract and a brief CV to Arthur Willemse (A.Willemse@sussex.ac.uk) no later than the 30th March 2012.
Useful information:
The conference will be held at the University of Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom.
Notifications of acceptance will be issued by the 7th of April 2012.
Speakers shall be allocated 40 minutes in total: 20 minutes in which to deliver their talk and 20 minutes for Q&A. This format allows graduate students to receive ample feedback on their work.
The conference fee is £25 for each accepted speaker.
This event is open to the public.
For further information concerning travel and accommodation, please contact Arthur (A.Willemse@sussex.ac.uk)