International
Conference in Ideology and Discourse Analysis 2019
Logics,
Critical Explanation and the Future of Critical Political
Theory:
Applying Discourse Analysis in Multiple Contexts
May 31 -
June 1 2019
The
publication of Hegemony and Socialist Strategy in 1985 stimulated the emergence
of a new post-Marxist approach to social and political analysis. It also
presented a radical challenge to both the mainstream methods of social science
and our styles of critical and political engagement. In synthesizing key
aspects of continental philosophy, Marxist political economy, political theory,
structural linguistics and psychoanalysis, Laclau & Mouffe’s text captured
the mood of the times. But this ‘originary text’ of the Essex School of
Discourse Theory also embodies a dramatic provocation for scholars, citizens
and political projects alike. Indeed, Hegemony and Socialist Strategy produces
just as many challenges and invitations as it does clear solutions. At the same
time, much has changed since the 1980s: the fall of communism, the rise of
neoliberal globalization and its various discontents, not to mention the
‘populist moment’ and the threat of catastrophic climate change. Yet the
relevance of this intervention and its productive reception is still pressing
today.
This
conference marks the 12th anniversary of the publication of another key text
associated with the Essex School of Discourse Theory: Jason Glynos and David
Howarth’s Logics of Critical Explanation in Social and Political Theory. The
‘logics approach’ addresses important issues of method and critique by
operationalizing key insights of Laclau and Mouffe’s work - and
poststructuralism more generally - for the conduct of critical empirical
research. This text has also served to inspire and provoke a new generation of
scholars across the globe in a wide range of disciplines. It has disclosed new
research puzzles and questions, while also inviting further inquiry into its
founding assumptions and empirical applications.
Organized
by the IDA PhD Collective at the Centre for Ideology and Discourse Analysis,
University of Essex, this conference will serve as a forum to explore the
present and future trajectories of critical empirical analysis and political
discourse theory. We invite PhD students, as well as early career and
established researchers, to share their findings and experiences of working
with the logics approach and poststructuralist discourse analysis more
generally. We welcome paper and panel proposals that address issues of theory,
method, and critique, whether in the context of case studies or not. (See below
for possible fields and themes.)
Keynote/Plenary
Speakers: Chantal Mouffe, Jodi Dean, Karen West, Jason Glynos, David Howarth
(more TBC).
For more
information and updates about the conference and our centre please visit
cida-essex.co.uk
Deadline
for paper abstracts: 4 February 2019, with notifications of outcome planned for
March 2019
Deadline
for panel abstracts: 14 January 2019, with notifications of outcome planned for
February 2019
Paper
abstracts: 200 words
Panel
abstracts: 400 words.
Panel abstracts can include suggested panel members, but
they can also be ‘open’. Once accepted, panel proposers can then advertise
through their networks.
Titles and
abstracts should be sent to: cida@essex.ac.uk
Conference
Registration fees
Essex DTC
and SeNSS PhD students Free
Other PhD
Students and young researchers £35
Academics
and other participants £90
Essex DTC
and SeNSS PhD students should send evidence of their studentship status. Other
students must send a valid scanned copy of their student ID or a copy of their
enrolment confirmation to the cIDA Conference Team by midnight (UK time) on 15
February 2019
Indicative
Fields & Themes
- Discourse Theory, Materialism and Social Analysis
- Critical Theory (broadly understood)
- Feminism and Gender Politics
- Populism, Collective Action and Social Movements
- Radical Democracy and the Commons
- Lacan and the Critique of Ideology
- Neoliberalism and After
- Global Crises and Challenges (Environment, Migration, Authoritarianism)
- Hegemony and Post-hegemony
- Governance, Governmentality and Power
- Subjectivity, Identity and Agency
- Critical Policy Studies
- Nationalism, Socialism and Neo-Fascism
- The Promises and Perils of Technology
- Media, Representation and the Future of Journalism
- Art History, the Role of the Artist and Curator
- Borders, Frontiers and Transgressions
- Rethinking Organisation and Institutions
- Space, Territoriality and Boundaries
- Critique, Normativity and Emancipation
- Digital Humanities
This
conference is supported by the ESRC (Economic and Social Research Council)
Essex DTC.
Deadline
for paper submissions: February 4, 2019
Deadline
for panel proposals: January 14, 2019
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