June 16 – Life Support: Race, Technology and the Gendered Biocapital of Outsourced Labor

June 16 – Life Support: Race, Technology and the Gendered Biocapital of Outsourced Labor

Kalindi Vora (University of California, San Diego)

June 16, 2017, 10 a.m.-12 noon, Fakultätssaal (Philosophicum)

This talk thinks through how biological bodies have become a new kind of global biocapital, extending historical legacies of colonial labor practices. It examines how forms of technologized labor serve to support life in the United States at the expense of the lives of people in India. Focusing on several case studies of outsourced work, it exposes the ways in which seemingly inalienable aspects of human life such as care, love, and trust—as well as biological bodies and organs—are not only commodi able entities but also components essential to contemporary capitalism. It asks, How do forms of transnational gendered reproductive labors of care, nurture, and even biological reproductivity (such as in transnational surrogacy and reproductive services) provide an opportunity to look at historical legacies of gender and labor that have been theorized through the lens of US Ethnic Studies, while calling for a new and relational understanding of the political potential in how subjects disrupt their geographies and the roles assigned to them through their labor?

 

Kalindi Vora is Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies and a liate faculty of the Science Studies and Critical Gender Studies Programs at UC San Diego.
The American Short Story: New Horizons

The American Short Story: New Horizons

Johannes Gutenberg-University, Mainz, Germany

October 5-7, 2017

Throughout its history, the American short story has been praised either as a highly polished gem or condemned as literary fast food. Despite such rise-and-fall predictions, the short story has always been a demanding form. Its narrative economy in terms of time and space records decisive, intimate moments of life that give the American Short Story a broad social resonance. As such, the short story offers a vibrant field of research. There is a renaissance in progress not only in terms of the short story’s productivity but also in terms of innovative theoretical questions. The current state of research is, however, probably best described as “ripening.”

The conference “The American Short Story: New Horizons” invites both panels and papers that address fresh and original questions relevant to studying the American short story. The conference thus seeks to explore the American short story as a coming together of the enduring narrative practice of compression and concision in American literature, presently culminating in a digital culture in which brevity rules.

The keynote lecture “The Short Story and the Census” will be held by Dr. Kasia Boddy (University of Cambridge, UK)

Downloads

Lecture with Prof. Babette B. Tischleder (Georg-August-Universität Göttingen): “Toward a Critical New Materialism: Nonhuman Agency, Narrative, and the Anthropocene (William Faulkner and Bruno Latour)”

Prof. Babette B. Tischleder (Georg-August-Universität Göttingen)

“Toward a Critical New Materialism: Nonhuman Agency, Narrative, and the Anthropocene (William Faulkner and Bruno Latour)”

2 February 2017
6 p.m. – 8 p.m. (18-20 c.t.)
P 6, Philosophicum

The talk will take up questions raised in current debates on materiality, the agency of objects, and concepts of the nonhuman in the Anthropocene. I critically engage with claims made in the context of object-oriented ontology and Bruno Latour’s actor-network-theory, arguing that our theoretical understanding of nonhuman agency can benefit from attending to imaginary rather than just ontological or speculative modes of thinking. Exploring narrative forms of world building in Twain and Faulkner and theorizing imaginary practices of writing and reading, I mean to show that these creative registers allow us to push the imaginative boundaries of theory beyond current philosophical prohibitions.

Download the Flyer here.