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středa | 20. 4. 2022 | 10:00

conference | Academic Conference Centre, Institute of Philosophy, Czech Academy of Sciences, Husova 4a, 110 00 Prague 1

Social Ontologies After Deleuze

Organized by the Department of Contemporary Continental Philosophy, Institute of Philosophy, Czech Academy of Sciences

Programme

Programme

10:00-10:50 Ian Buchanan: Deleuze and Guattari’s Differential Method 

10:50-11:00 coffee break

11:00-11:50 Michaela Fišerová: Going Viral: Affective Haecceities on Social Networks

11:50-12:00 coffee break

12:00-12:50 Petr Prášek: Deleuze, Phenomenology, and the Indispensability of the Ethics of the Event

12:50-14:00 lunch break

14:00-14:50 Janae Sholtz: Interrogating the Cartographies of New Materialist Feminism: The Linguistic Turn, the Posthuman and the Transcontinental Divide

14:50-15:00 coffee break

15:00-15:50 Anthony Faramelli: Institutional Cartographies: Analyzing the Social After Guattari and CERFI

15:50-16:00 coffee break 

16:00-16-50 Petr Kouba: War in Ukraine, Fascism and Anti-Fascism

 

Biographies

Prof. Ian Buchanan lectures at University of Wollongong.  His previous position was Professor of Critical and Cultural Theory at the Centre for Critical and Cultural Theory at Cardiff University.
Ian Buchanan has published on a wide variety of subjects across a range of disciplines, including literary studies, cultural studies, communications studies and philosophy.  He has published on film, literature, music, space, the internet and war as well a number of other subjects.  He is the author of the Oxford Dictionary of Critical Theory and the founding editor of the international journal Deleuze Studies.  He is also the editor of four book series: Deleuze Connections (EUP), Critical ConnectionsPlateaus (EUP) and Deleuze Encounters (Continuum). His publications include Michel de Certau: Cultural Theorist (SAGE Publications, 2000), Deleuze: A Metacommentary (Edinburgh University Press, 2000), Fredric Jameson: Live Theory (Continuum, 2006), Deleuze and Guattari's Anti-Oedipus (Continuum, 2008), Assemblage Theory and Method: An Introduction and Guide (Bloomsbury Academic, 2020), The Incomplete Project of Schizoanalysis: Collected Essays on Deleuze and Guattari (Edinburgh University Press, 2021).

 

Doc. Michaela Fišerová Ph.D. works in the fields of philosophy and aesthetics, she specializes in postructructuralism, especially Derrida´s and Deleuze´s philosophy. She has earned her M.A. in Aesthetics at Université Paris8, her Ph.D. in Political Philosophy at Université Paris7, and her habilitation in Philosophy at Masaryk university. In the recent years, she has been lecturer and researcher at Charles University in Prague, Masaryk University in Brno, Metropolitan University Prague and Academy of Performing Arts in Prague. In her early book Sharing the Visible: Rethinking Foucault (L´Harmattan, 2013), she examined two historically different visualities in order to understand the relationship between visual representation of events and their political (mis)recognition in documentation. Her book Deconstructing Signature (Prague, 2016) came out of her GAČR-supported research project. She proposed to deconstruct three metaphysical expectations of handwritten signature – similarity, authenticity, and repeatability – as a triple aporia trapped in the interval between life and law. In her book Fragmentary Vision: Rancière, Derrida, Nancy (Prague, 2019), she proposed an innovative insight into the “fragmentary” practice of photographic representation by arguing that it is possible to take a photograph of a memory, if that “memory” is metonymically composed out of fragments of present perceptions. In her book Deleuze on Literature: Between Art, Animality and Politics, co-written with Gregg Lambert and Martin Charvát, she examined crucial differences in Deleuze´s and Derrida´s reading of Kafka´s "animal" stories. In her last book Event of Signature. Jacques Derrida and Repeating of the Unrepeatable (SUNY Press, 2022), she returned to the problem of handwritten signature to question the metaphysical expectation to repeat the unrepeatable event of handwriting. 

 

Dr. Petr Prášek is a postdoc researcher at the Department of Contemporary Continental Philosophy of the Institute of Philosophy, Czech Academy of Sciences. In 2019, he received his Ph.D. in philosophy from the Université Paris 1, Panthéon-Sorbonne, France, and Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic (supervisors: prof. R. Barbaras, prof. M. Petříček). His Ph.D. thesis, Le devenir-autre de l’existence. Essai sur la phénoménologie contemporaine, was awarded the Bolzano Prize by the President of Charles University in 2020.

He published a Czech monograph on Gilles Deleuze’s philosophy, Člověk v šíleném dění světa: Filosofie Gillesa Deleuze, and several articles on contemporary French phenomenology. All these texts deal with the analysis of the becoming-other of human existence. In his current project, Petr Prášek is extending his research and focusing on meta-ethical implications of the dynamic descriptions of existence: he attempts to apply the results of contemporary French phenomenology to actual problems such as ecological issues or fake news.

 

Dr. Janae Sholtz lectures at Alvernia University. She is the author of The Invention of a People, Heidegger and Deleuze on Art and the Political (Edinburgh Press, 2015), and the editor of Deleuze and the Schizoanalysis of Feminism: Alliances and Allies for Bloomsbury and a special journal edition entitled Infinite Eros: Deleuze, Guattari, and Feminist Couplings. Janae Sholtz has published research in the areas of continental philosophy, feminist theory, philosophy of art, and social and political philosophy. She has written articles for Evental Aesthetics, Deleuze and Guattair Studies, Journal of Continental and Comparative Philosophy, phioSOPHIA and is currently co-editing a book on Contemporary French Philosophy and Stoicism.

 

Dr Anthony Faramelli is a psychosocial researcher and practitioner. He is lecturer in Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths, University of London where he co-leads the BA in Fine Art and History of Art. Anthony also works as a mental health recovery programme consultant and reflective practice facilitator. He is a member of the Executive Board of the Association for Psychosocial Studies and is a founding member of the Network for Institutional Analysis.

Anthony Faramelli is the author of Resistance, Revolution and Fascism: Zapatismo and Assemblage Politics (Bloomsbury 2018) and an editor, with David Hancock and Rob White, of Spaces of Crisis and Critique: Heterotopias Beyond Foucault (Bloomsbury 2018). He is currently completing a monograph provisionally titled The Mass Psychology of Fascism in the Age of Machines: Big Data, Surveillance and Control.

 

Dr. Petr Kouba studied philosophy at the Faculty of Arts, Charles University in Prague, and received PhD at the same department in 2006. During his postgraduate study, he was awarded several fellowships: at the Universität Zurich (2000 - 2001), Duquesne University in Pittsburgh (2001 - 2002), and the Université de Lausanne (2003-2004). After receiving PhD, he lectured at the Anglo-American College in Prague and in the international program CERGE-EI at the Charles University. Besides being a researcher at the Institute of Philosophy, he lectured philosophy at the Departement of Philosophy and Religious Studies of the Faculty of Arts, Charles Universtity in Prague between 2006 - 2016. He is an author of the books Fenomén duševní poruchy. Perspektivy Heideggerova myšlení v oblasti psychopatologie, which was translated to English (Springer, 2015) and German (Königshausen-Neumann, 2012). He published another two monographies: Margins of Phenomenology (Verlag T. Bautz, 2020), and L'exode sans Moise: L'émigration rom comme probléme politique (Verlag T. Bautz, 2021). He also co-edited three collective monographies: Dynamic Structure: Language as Open SystemMedicína v kontextu západního myšlení, and Franz Kafka: Minority Report.