Conferences

A Journey of Ideas Across: In Dialog with Edward Said

Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, Germany
30 Oct 2013 - 02 Nov 2013

From October 31 to November 2 2013, international scholars and artists will gather at Haus der Kulturen der Welt to explore Said’s critical body of work as an inspiration in questioning the histories and futures of contemporary social challenges and revolutionary movements.

Edward Said’s body of work caused a paradigm shift in the humanities and the social sciences. Furthermore, his ideas have transcended the boundaries of academic debate. During political upheavals in a number of Arab countries, activists turned his concepts into their slogans. In Tunisia, his words appeared as graffiti on the walls of the revolting streets. The symposium aims not only to extend the venture of engaging Said’s relationship to the world and current realities, but also to set off from the most obscure entries, hence left unguarded. Based on the Arabic concept of al muthanna, which refers to a relationship between two entities that is neither a couple nor a duality, “A Journey of Ideas Across” will imagine and examine situations that go beyond the binary logic of dichotomies and oppositions. Using formats that take up Said’s interdisciplinary method of inquiry, the symposium will reflect on the themes “Orientalism Traps,” “Engagement, Resistance and Imagination,” “The Anti-Narratives of Late Style,” “Power, Weakness and Agency,” and “Beyond the Limits of Power.”

Personal readings of some of Said’s texts will be offered by philosopher Akeel Bilgrami, literary scholar, Samia Mehrez and writer Feridun Zaimo?lu. Other keynotes will carry some of Said’s observations, including his critique of dichotomies, into the present and to yet unexplored fields: literary theorist Abdelfattah Kilito will address literary questions linked to places and relationships of duality; filmmaker Trinh T. Minh-ha will contemplate questions around time, strangeness, mobility, and stillness; anthropologist Mahmood Mamdani will reflect on the historical significance of the post-apartheid transition in South Africa and art historian W.J.T. Mitchell will explore representations of mental illness across a variety of media. Playwright Mohammad al Attar will present a staged reading that questions perceptions of the ‘homeland’ with regard to Syria, while artists Basel Abbas & Ruanne Abou-Rahme, in their lecture-performance, search for a radical imagery break from colonialism and capitalism. Ahl al Kahf movement, in turn, brings Said’s thought not only to Tunis’s streets, but also to Berlin’s. Discussions with political economist Prabhat Patnaik and the sociologists Asef Bayat and Meltem Ahiska, among others, will explore notions of imperialism, power, and knowledge production. Finally, the film program “The Anti-Narrative of Late Style” curated by James Quandt showcases the trilogy made over the last decade by Jean-Luc Godard as an illustration of Said’s observations on ‘late style.’

In the framework of the symposium, a third workshop will bring together some twenty-five thinkers, theorists, students, and artists from different countries in the Arabic-speaking world and from Germany to reflect on Al Masha or the Space of the Common” today. Workshop participants will debate and critically reflect ways in which the public and common spaces are constituted, occupied, maintained and shaped. Troubling issues and constructive ideas emerged during the workshop will be shared with the public on Friday, November 1.
Symposium with Basel Abbas & Ruanne Abou-Rahme, Meltem Ahiska, Ahl al Kahf, Mohammad al Attar, Rana Barakat, Asef Bayat, Akeel Bilgrami, Burnt Friedman & Saam Schlamminger, Subhi Hadidi, Abdelfattah Kilito, Mahmood Mamdani, Samia Mehrez, W.J.T. Mitchell, Prabhat Patnaik, James Quandt, Adania Shibli, Michael Steinberg, Fawwaz Traboulsi, Trinh T. Minh-ha, Michael Wood and Feridun Zaimo?lu.


Symposium: “
A JOURNEY OF IDEAS ACROSS: IN DIALOG WITH EDWARD SAID”
 

October 31 – November 2
As an influential theorist and public intellectual, Edward W. Said has produced a body of work that has retained its resonance in a variety of fields and areas worldwide. On the tenth anniversary of his death, this interdisciplinary symposium seeks to interpret his work – from “Orientalism” (1978) to “On Late Style” (posthumously, 2006) – with a view on cultural and political realities today, including those in the Arab world.
Curated by Adania Shibli and Akeel Bilgrami, Katrin Klingan

Workshop: “Al-Masha or the Space of the Common”

October 30 – November 1  
In the three-day workshop “Al-Masha or the Space of the Common”, thinkers, activists and students from the Arab world and Germany will debate alternative viewpoints on the public sphere and common property with the symposium speakers, and will explore new approaches of thought and action with regard to public and private space.
Curated by Sandi Hilal and Alessandro Petti

Full programme here 

 

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