Past Equality and Welfare Events
Tue 15 Oct, '19- |
Official Launch of the Post-Kantian Research CentreRoom S0.11, Social Sciences BuildingSimon Critchley (New School for Social Research): Tragedy, the Greeks and Us Response by Andrew Cooper (Warwick) and David Fearn (Warwick) |
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Tue 29 Oct, '19- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy SeminarRoom S0.11, Social Sciences BuildingSpeaker: Stephen Houlgate (Warwick) Title: Kant and Hegel on the Antinomies of Reason |
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Tue 19 Nov, '19- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy SeminarRoom S0.11, Social Sciences BuildingSpeaker: Beatrice Han-Pile (Essex) Title: 'The Doing Is Everything': A Middle-Voiced Reading of Agency in Nietzsche |
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Tue 26 Nov, '19- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy SeminarRoom S0.11, Social Sciences BuildingSpeaker: Jeffrey A. Bell (Southeastern Louisiana University) Title: 'Towards a Deleuzian-Humean Political Theory' |
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Tue 21 Jan, '20- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy SeminarRoom S0.11, Social Sciences BuildingGuest Speakers: Daniele Lorenzini (Warwick) Title: Genealogy, Possibilization, and (Post-)Critique David Owen (Southampton) Title: Genealogy as Re-Problematization: Autonomy, Aspect-Change and Limits |
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Tue 4 Feb, '20- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy SeminarRoom S0.11, Social Sciences BuildingSpeaker: Nina Power (Roehampton) Title: 'Philosophies of the Wolf: Freud and Deleuze & Guattari |
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Tue 18 Feb, '20- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy SeminarRoom S0.11, Social Sciences BuildingSpeaker: Simone Kotva (Cambridge) Title: 'An Enquiry Concerning Non-Human Understanding: Philosophy, Ecstasy and Ecological Thinking' |
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Tue 3 Mar, '20- |
CANCELLED: Post-Kantian European Philosophy SeminarBergson on Time and Freedom With Keith Ansell-Pearson (Warwick), Emily Herring (Leeds) and Mark Sinclair (Roehampton) |
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Tue 20 Oct, '20- |
Warwick Post-Kantian European SeminarWebinarSpeaker: Robert C Miner (Baylor University) Title: 'In the South: Nietzsche and the Homines Religiosi in The Gay Science V' |
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Tue 3 Nov, '20- |
Warwick Post-Kantian European SeminarWebinarSpeaker: Thomas Nail (University of Denver) Title: TBC |
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Tue 17 Nov, '20- |
Warwick Post-Kantian European SeminarWebinarSpeaker: Naomi Waltham-Smith (Warwick) Title: 'The Rhythm of Democracy - The Pulse of Destruction' |
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Tue 1 Dec, '20- |
Warwick Post-Kantian European SeminarWebinarSpeaker: Wahida Khandar (Manchester Metropolitan University) Title: 'Sketches of Lived Time' |
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Thu 7 Jan, '21- |
Beyond The Punitive SocietyWebinarA joint session of 'Abolition 13/13' with Columbia Center for Contemporary Critical Thought Contributors: Miguel de Beistegui Claire Blencowe Henrique Carvalho Stuart Elden Daniele Lorenzini Goldie Osuri Irene Dal Poz Federico Testa Bernard E Harcourt |
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Tue 19 Jan, '21- |
Warwick Post-Kantian European SeminarWebinarSpeaker: Manon Garcia (Harvard Society of Fellows) Title: 'Masculinity as an Impasse: Beauvoir's Understanding of Men's Situation in The Second Sex' |
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Wed 20 Jan, '21- |
Biopolitics Reading GroupMS Teams'Biopolitics and Deconstruction' Guest Speaker: Naomi Waltham-Smith (Warwick) |
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Wed 3 Feb, '21- |
Biopolitics Reading GroupMS Teams'Transgressive Resistance and Biopolitics' Guest Speaker: Guilel Treiber (KU Leuven) |
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Tue 9 Feb, '21- |
Warwick Post-Kantian European SeminarWebinarSpeaker: Miguel de Beistegui (Universitat Pompeu Fabra) Title: 'The Spirit of Revenge and Its Political Density: Between Spinoza and Nietzsche' |
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Tue 23 Feb, '21- |
Warwick Post-Kantian European SeminarWebinarSpeaker: Angela Breitenbach (University of Cambridge) Title: 'Kant's Idea of Unity' |
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Wed 3 Mar, '21- |
Biopolitics Reading GroupMS Teams'From Biopolitics to Bodypolitics' Guest Speaker: Karsten Schubert (Freiburg) |
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Tue 9 Mar, '21- |
Warwick Post-Kantian European SeminarWebinarSpeaker: Fiona Hughes (University of Essex) Title: 'The Significance of the Use of Relief for the Structure of Intentions in Late Palaeolithic Cave Art' |
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Wed 17 Mar, '21- |
Biopolitics Reading GroupMS Teams'The Biopolitics of Mobility' Guest Speaker: Martina Tazzioli (Goldsmiths) |
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Fri 26 Mar, '21 - Sat 27 Mar, '21All-day |
Warwick Continental Philosophy Conference 2020/21OnlineRuns from Friday, March 26 to Saturday, March 27. Theme: 'Continental Philosophy and Its Histories' Keynote Speakers: Professor Stella Sandford (Kingston University) Dr Mogens Laerke (CNRS) Dr Francey Russell (Columbia University) Continental Philosophy often focuses its efforts on studying, comparing, and criticising the thought of past philosophers. One would be hard-pressed to find a thinker in the Continental tradition who has not understood and presented their own thought in relation to an Ancient Greek, or a Modern philosopher. But these philosophers do not approach historical figures as ‘historians of ideas’ or as ‘experts’ on a historical period. Rather, the new philosophy is seen as standing in contrast to, or as a continuation of, the problems and questions of the past. As such, Continental Philosophy often places a strong emphasis on the construction of, and the engagement with, its histories, thereby understanding and differentiating itself on the basis of traditions, schools, and systems, rather than theories, disciplines, and problems. One of the aims of this conference is to investigate different ways in which Continental Philosophy engages with the thinkers that belong to its history: what is it to ‘read’ Plato, Spinoza, Kant, or Nietzsche in Continental Philosophy? How important is the canon and what is its methodological and philosophical significance? Should we keep putting forward various creative (mis)readings of the past philosophers or, as Husserl has suggested early on, is it better to get rid of the past and proceed afresh with a new method? History, however, is more than a ‘tool’ utilised by Continental Philosophy. From Hegel’s Philosophy of History and Marx’s materialisation of it, to Heidegger’s distinction between Historie and Geschichte, and Adorno and Horkheimer’s Dialectic of Enlightenment Continental Philosophy makes the phenomenon (in contrast to the discipline) of history the very object of its investigations. Hence, we wonder: what does it mean to write a ‘philosophy of history’ and what possible form can such an enquiry take today? But it must not be forgotten that Continental Philosophy can itself be seen as a period in the longer history of philosophy. This makes the very concept of Continental Philosophy open to inquiry by philosophers, but also to historians, sociologists, political scientists, etc. What does it mean to address Continental philosophy as a historical period? Can methods, approaches, traditions, and theories from other disciplines illuminate and inform philosophical understandings of Continental Philosophy? Can such approaches be helpful to disciplines other than philosophy? This is another crucial topic that this conference aims to investigate. This conference is made possible by generous funding provided by the University of Warwick Philosophy Department and British Society for the History of Philosophy. It is an annual event within The Centre for Research in Post-Kantian European Philosophy (University of Warwick). https://warwick.ac.uk/fac/soc/philosophy/research/activities/postkantian/events/wcpc |
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Tue 4 May, '21- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy Seminar SeriesMS TeamsGuest Speaker: Verena Erlenbusch-Anderson (Syracuse University) Title: Contested Legacies: Constellations of Terrorism in the Postbellum United States Response by Quassim Cassam (University of Warwick) The seminar will be held online on MS Teams. If you wish to attend and be added to the Team, please send an email to Daniele.Lorenzini@warwick.ac.uk. |
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Thu 3 Jun, '21 - Fri 4 Jun, '2110am - 6pm |
Workshop: Genealogy in the Analytic and Continental TraditionsRuns from Thursday, June 03 to Friday, June 04. On 3-4 June 2021, Daniele Lorenzini is organising a workshop on genealogy in the analytic and continental traditions, with papers by Amy Allen (Penn State), Sacha Golob (KCL), Guy Longworth (Warwick), Matthieu Queloz (Oxford), Daniel Rodriguez-Navas (New School), Sabina Vaccarino Bremner (Groningen), Lee Wilson (Edinburgh) and himself. The workshop will take place in the afternoon of those two days, to allow the speakers who are based in the US to participate. Q&A and general discussion will constitute the most important part of the workshop. |
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Tue 8 Jun, '21- |
CRPLA/CPKEP Joint Event: Naomi Waltham-Smith Book Launch |
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Tue 19 Oct, '21- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy Research Seminar SeriesMS TeamsGuest Speaker: Michelle Kosch (Cornell) Title: 'Recognition After Fichte' |
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Tue 2 Nov, '21- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy Research Seminar SeriesMS TeamsGuest Speaker: Tuomo Tiisala (Helsinki) Title: 'Truth, the Whole Truth, and Politics and Truth: Foucault on the Revaluation of Values' |
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Wed 17 Nov, '21- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy Research Seminar SeriesMS TeamsGuest Speaker: Johanna Oksala (Loyola, University of Chicago) Title: 'The Subjects of Capitalism: From Marx to Foucault' |
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Tue 30 Nov, '21- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy Research Seminar SeriesMS TeamsGuest Speaker: Samantha Matherne (Harvard) Title: 'The Normativity of Colour: Phenomenological Perspectives' |
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Tue 25 Jan, '22- |
Post-Kantian European Philosophy Research Seminar SeriesS0.08/onlineGuest Speaker: Mark Wrathall (Oxford) Title: 'The 'Existential' verses the 'Modal' Interpretation of Heidegger's Conception of Death' |