The Summer School in Global Studies and Critical Theory
 

THE SEA

Bologna • June 27 – July 8, 2022

 

The sea has played a powerful role in the very constitution of global modernity. Multiple vectors of colonial expansion and forced labor transportation have striated the Oceans since the conquest of the Americas and the Middle Passage. Empires were built at sea, with profound implications for state building on land. In many respects, global capitalism is a seaborne phenomenon. At the same time, the Oceans have been since the inception of modernity contested political spaces, where the movements and struggles of what C.L.R. James called mariners, renegades, and castaways nurtured specific forms of maritime radicalism and diasporic politics. Today, the sea continues to be the stage of dramatic conflicts and tensions. This is apparent if one thinks for instance of the lethal reinforcement of maritime borders to confront migration in such places as the Mediterranean or the Bay of Bengal, of deepwater drilling and extraction, of military confrontation in the South China Sea, of maritime logistics in front of supply chains disruptions in the pandemic conjuncture, or of the acceleration of sea level rise due to climate change. How are we to make sense of such complex developments? How are we to represent them from the angle of critical theory? And is there something to be learned from the study of maritime issues that is valid even beyond the sea in the current global predicament? All these questions and topics figure prominently in the 2022 edition of the summer school, which aims at combining a multiplicity of diverse gazes on the sea to grasp a set of developments and conflicts that are defining features of our age. 

MORE THAN 40 participants will be selected and required to attend all plenary lectures, the two morning courses, and at least one afternoon class per week.

MONDAY, JUNE 27
 
7.00 pm (GMT +2)
Welcome and presentation of the 2022 edition: SANDRO MEZZADRA
  
Public event
MARCUS REDIKER, Against Terracentrism: Oceans as Sites of Struggle and History-Making 
Auditorium BIAGI, 
Piazza del Nettuno, 3 – Open to the public
Watch this event on YOUTUBE
 
TUESDAY, JUNE 28
 
10.00 am - 12:00 pm (GMT +2)
Morning course
  
2.00 - 4.00 pm (GMT +2)
Afternoon courses
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29
 
10.00 am - 12:00 pm (GMT +2)
Morning course
  
2.00 - 4.00 pm (GMT +2)
Afternoon courses
THURSDAY, JUNE 30
 
10.00 am - 12:00 pm (GMT +2)
Morning course
 
2.00 - 4.00 pm (GMT +2)
Afternoon courses
FRIDAY, JULY 1
 
10.00 am - 12:00 pm (GMT +2)
Morning course
 
7.00 pm (GMT +2)
Public event
INTO THE BLACK BOX, The Forgotten Spaces of Globalization. A Tribute to Allan Sekula
Sala TASSINARI, Piazza Maggiore, 6 – Open to the public
Watch this event on YOUTUBE
 
MONDAY, JULY 4
 
7:00 pm (GMT +2)
Public event
Forensic Oceanography: Tracing and Contesting Violence Across the Mediterranean Frontier
with CHARLES HELLER and LORENZO PEZZANI
Chair SANDRO MEZZADRA
Sala TASSINARI, Piazza Maggiore, 6 – Open to the public
Watch this event on YOUTUBE
 
TUESDAY, JULY 5
 
10.00 am - 12:00 pm (GMT +2)
Morning course
2.00 - 4.00 pm (GMT +2)
Afternoon courses
 
4:30 - 6:30 pm (GMT +2)
Workshop
Mapping the Black Atlantic: A Digital Humanities Workshop

convened by LAURENT DUBOIS
 
WEDNESDAY, JULY 6
 
10.00 am - 12:00 pm (GMT +2)
Morning course
 
2.00 - 4.00 pm (GMT +2)
Afternoon courses
 
4:30 - 6:30 pm (GMT +2)
Workshop
Mapping the Black Atlantic: A Digital Humanities Workshop

convened by LAURENT DUBOIS
 
7:00 pm (GMT +2)
Public event
Sala TASSINARI, Piazza Maggiore, 6 – Open to the public
Watch this event on YOUTUBE
 
THURSDAY, JULY 7
 
10.00 am - 12:00 pm (GMT +2)
Morning course
 
2.00 - 4.00 pm (GMT +2)
Afternoon courses
 
4:30 - 6:30 pm (GMT +2)
Workshop
Mapping the Black Atlantic: A Digital Humanities Workshop

convened by LAURENT DUBOIS
 
FRIDAY, JULY 8
 
10.00 am - 12:00 pm (GMT +2)
Morning course