Summer School in Global Studies and Critical Theory
GLOBAL HUMANITIES AND THE GLOBAL SOUTH
HISTORY, POLITICS, AND CRITICAL THEORY
Bologna • June 27 – July 8, 2016
The 2016 Summer school in Global studies and critical theory focused on the historical dimension of the multiple “global souths” and their political and intellectual roots and discussed the contribute of the current debate on the global south to the methodological, conceptual and historical aspects of a global humanities project. Classes, seminars, public meetings and debates drew their energy from the critical contributions of the Global South studies, but also attempted to single out the traps of reification and ethnocentrism entailed in the very notion of a Global South. Teaching and research programs on global humanities have been criticized by postcolonial studies in the last decades because of their Eurocentric background. Against these Eurocentric narratives and conceptual framework, the notion of the global south has stood out as a political and scientific alternative. Although the idea of a Global South has found a relatively recent popularization within academia, it is rooted in long-standing intellectual, political and institutional traditions.
MONDAY, JUNE 27
|
4.30 pm
Lecture ACHILLE MBEMBE, Violence After Fanon: The Politics of Viscerality
7.00 pm
Welcoming cocktail |
TUESDAY, JUNE 28
|
10.00-12.00 am
Morning course
FRANCO FARINELLI, Space, Places, Globalization: A Geographical Genealogy, and a Metageographical Analysis
2.00-4.00 pm
Afternoon courses
• ANTHONY BOGUES, Reframing Critical Theory: Fanon, Cesaire, Wynter, and the Enunciation of the Human • SARAH NUTTALL, South Of Theory – Three Themes |
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29
|
10.00-12.00 am
Morning course
FRANCO FARINELLI, Space, Places, Globalization: A Geographical Genealogy, and a Metageographical Analysis
2.00-4.00 pm
Afternoon courses
• ANTHONY BOGUES, Reframing Critical Theory: Fanon, Cesaire, Wynter, and the Enunciation of the Human • SARAH NUTTALL, South Of Theory – Three Themes 8.30-9.30 pm
Critical dialogue
Global Borders and Emerging Formations of Racism in the Contemporary World
Sandro MEZZADRA • Achille MBEMBE • Juan OBARRIO |
THURSDAY, JUNE 30
|
10.00-12.00 am
Morning course
FRANCO FARINELLI, Space, Places, Globalization: A Geographical Genealogy, and a Metageographical Analysis
2.00-4.00 pm
Afternoon courses
• ANTHONY BOGUES, Reframing Critical Theory: Fanon, Cesaire, Wynter, and the Enunciation of the Human • SARAH NUTTALL, South Of Theory – Three Themes |
FRIDAY, JULY 1
|
10.00-12.00 am
Morning course
FRANCO FARINELLI, Space, Places, Globalization: A Geographical Genealogy, and a Metageographical Analysis
2.00-4.00 pm
|
MONDAY, JULY 4
|
10.00-12.00 am
2.00-4.00 pm
4.30 pm
Lecture
DEBJANI GANGULY, The Global South and Indian Ocean Worlds
|
TUESDAY, JULY 5
|
10.00-12.00 am
Morning course
2.00-4.00 pm
Afternoon course • DAVIDE DOMENICI, Global Natives: A Historical Approach to the Rise of Indigeneity as a Cultural and Political Category • THOMAS KLUBOCK, Environmental History and the Global South 4.30-6.30 pm
|
WEDNESDAY, JULY 6
|
10.00-12.00 am
Morning course
2.00-4.00 pm
Afternoon courses
• DAVIDE DOMENICI, Global Natives: A Historical Approach to the Rise of Indigeneity as a Cultural and Political Category • THOMAS KLUBOCK, Environmental History and the Global South 4.30-6.30 pm
8.30-9.30 pm
Critical dialogue
|
THURSDAY, JULY 7
|
10.00-12.00 am
Morning course
2.00-4.00 pm
Afternoon courses
• DAVIDE DOMENICI, Global Natives: A Historical Approach to the Rise of Indigeneity as a Cultural and Political Category • THOMAS KLUBOCK, Environmental History and the Global South 4.30-6.30 pm
Forum
Redefining Emergent Shapes: Brazil as a Case Study for Global South Coordinated by FRANCISCO FOOT HARDMAN and ROBERTO VECCHI
|
FRIDAY, JULY 8
|
10.00-12.00 am
Morning course
2.00-4.00 pm
7.30 pm
Closing cocktail |