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Rethinking Marxism:
A Journal of Economics, Culture & Society, is
pleased to announce its 7th international conference,
to be held at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst
on 5-8 November 2009. RETHINKING MARXISM's six previous
international conferences have each attracted more
than 1000 students, scholars, and activists. They
have included keynote addresses and plenary sessions,
formal papers, roundtables, workshops, art exhibitions,
video presentations, activist discussions, and cultural
performances. Similar events are planned for the next
international conference, RM09: New Marxian Times.
Overview
THEME: RM09:
New Marxian Times is dedicated to exploring the possibilities
and challenges of Marxism for understanding and engaging
with the contemporary world. Neoliberal capitalism,
long criticized by Marxists and others on the Left,
is now going through its own long-term economic and
social crises. What new possibilities do these crises
create for Marxist and other progressive ideas and
visions? How does Marxism, and left-wing thought more
generally, need to be rethought to respond to these
challenges? Decades of declining real wages with rising
levels of exploitation and economic inequality, increasingly
unaffordable energy costs, and a loss of the illusion
of middle-class status characterize large parts of
the world, in the North as well as the South. Declining
state support for social welfare programs, privatization
and deregulation, record levels of migration of people,
growing urban slums, and increasingly authoritarian
state interventions in the lives of ordinary citizens
have become the norm in the past two decades. Concurrently,
multiple environmental crises (from climate change
and global warming to increasing food insecurity,
water shortages and health challenges) have been receiving
increased attention. From the anti-elite sentiments
expressed in response to the bailout of the financial
industries to emerging anti-immigrant and nationalist
efforts and ethnic and religious-based movements,
average people are feeling both angrier and more insecure
in response to current conditions. And the elites
have few if any answers to the economic and social
crises that beset the existing national and international
orders. Perhaps coalescing in the financial crisis
acknowledged in the autumn of 2008, these dynamics
represent both a significant crisis for currently
constituted capitalism and modes of governance as
well as a set of challenges and possibilities for
all of us concerned with working towards a non-exploitative
and more equitable world. In that light, we are seeking
intellectual, political, and cultural works that address
the possible contributions that Marxist ideas and
forms of analysis can make in responding to the challenges
of these new times. Human rights, democracy, environmental
concerns, new organizing movements in South America
and elsewhere throughout the globe, the growth of
social activisms represented as anarchist, anti-imperialist,
or in response to globalization, workers subjectivities
and movements, contradictions within emerging and
transitional economies, emergent nationalisms, and
debt and the credit crises all represent possible
areas for contributions to new thinking about the
role of Marxist theories, cultures, and politics in
today’s world. We strongly encourage papers that address
these topics in relation to the global south. Of course,
we also understand the vital importance of analyzing
history in order to help us to understand and respond
to contemporary conditions. To understand the new,
we must reflect upon and learn from the old. In that
light, we are also interested in panels and papers
that emphasize historical analysis such as the history
of Marxism(s), labor history, historical analysis
of academia, histories of social movements and political
practices, the historical development of Marxist/Socialist
feminism, imperialisms, and the historical relationships
between class and race- based movements.
Call for Papers
RM09:
New Marxian Times will be held over four days,
beginning on Thursday evening, 5 November 2009 and
ending on Sunday afternoon, 8 November 2009. In addition
to two plenary sessions and an art exhibition, there
will be concurrent panels, workshops, and art/cultural
events. We invite the submission of organized sessions
that follow traditional or non-traditional formats
(such as workshops, roundtables, and dialogue among
and between presenters and audience) as well as individual
presentations. Since Marxism covers a wide variety
of fields, from literature to public health and forms
of political practice, from environmental organizing
to opposing global inequality and envisioning new
economic and social practice, anyone engaging with
Marxism in any discipline or form of activism is encouraged
to submit paper and panel proposals. We encourage
those working in areas that intersect with Marxism,
such as critical race theory, feminism, political
economy, anarchist studies, cultural and literary
studies, queer theory, working-class and labor studies,
postcolonial studies, geography and urban studies,
psychoanalysis, social and natural sciences, philosophy,
and around issues of class, race, ethnicity, nationality,
gender, sexuality, and disability, to submit proposals.
We also welcome video, poetry, performance, and all
other modes of presentation and cultural expression.
SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS
Proposals for papers,
films, or other formats should include:
- Paper title
- Presenter's name and contact information (mail,
email, phone, affiliations)
- Brief abstract (no more than 200 words)
- Technology needs for presentation
Proposals for panels should include:
- Panel title
- Name, contact information, and paper title for
each presenter
- Brief abstract (no more than 200 words) explaining
the panel's focus
- Brief abstract for each paper (no more than 200
words)
- Names and contact information for any discussant(s)
or respondent(s)
- Technology needs of presenters
- Title, contact, and address for any sponsoring
organization or journal
The appropriate pre-registration fee must accompany
all proposal submissions. Unfortunately, any proposal
not accompanied by the appropriate pre-registration
fee cannot be considered. Proposals that are not accepted
will have their pre-registration fees returned in
full. If you are submitting a proposal for an entire
panel, please make sure you include the pre-registration
fee for all members of the panel.
The deadline for proposal submission
is 1 August 2009.
For more details please visit: http://www.rethinkingmarxism.org
April 04, 2009. |