New Cultures of the Left: first South Asian Historical Materialism Conference; New Delhi, 3-4 April 2013
Call for Papers: "New Cultures of the Left" -
The First South Asian Historical Materialism Conference New Delhi, 3-4 April 2013
The Delhi HM Conference “New Cultures of the Left”, the first South Asian Historical Materialism Conference, will be held at the Conference Centre, Delhi University, on 3-4 April 2013. The conference occurs against several backgrounds that make the revival of the left and the re-emergence of Marxist and other forms of radical theory and politics imperative. These ‘backgrounds’ include the massive convulsions in the world economy from the financial crash of 2008 onwards; the great uprisings in the Arab world that dominated the whole of 2011 with their remarkable mass-based struggles for democracy; the emergence in the West of spontaneous forms of resistance to Austerity politics and its fierce attacks on the lives of millions of people both in and out of employment.
The background to the Conference also includes the consolidation of powerful capitalist interests in countries like India where big business now shapes public policy without the shackles of ‘socialism’, and government and business have jointly undermined the unions, massively casualised labour markets and accelerated the dispossession of whole communities. The consolidation, likewise, of deeply authoritarian tendencies, both secular and religious, that stand for the eradication of existing constitutional democracies and the rights they offer to the mass of citizens in favour of stronger, more repressive states or states reconstructed on non-secular ‘fundamentalist’ lines. And last but not least, the deep crisis of the Party-controlled left and its inability to debate issues in open, democratic and politically creative ways, much less to attract a new generation of workers and youth to the cause of a radical left politics and culture.
The conference is seen as both South Asian and internationalist in a wider sense. We invite papers (20 minute presentations) or panel proposals (for sessions of 1 hr 45 mins) under any of the broad themes below:
1) The legacies of Marx (Marxism as a theoretical/philosophical tradition);
2) Perspectives for socialism in the twenty-first century;
3) The Left, religion, caste & cultural politics today;
4) Violence, war and modernity (including papers on fascism, both historical & contemporary);
5) New debates on sexual politics, and Marxism and Feminism;
6) The return of immiseration: workers, work, land and communities;
7) The crisis and finance capital today;
8) Red & Green: an integration of perspectives;
9) Struggles for democracy;
10) Capitalism and contemporary media cultures;
11) Culture on the Left (Literature, art, film);
12) Histories of the Left and Marxism in South Asia and internationally;
13) New developments in Marxist philosophy;
14) The contemporary relevance of Marx’s Capital.
PDF version at: http://goo.gl/MIA91
Paper abstracts and panel proposals submissions should try and stay within 300 words, and be sent in to: <submissionsdelhihm@gmail. com> by 1st September 2012.
See also: The End of the Left in India?
The First South Asian Historical Materialism Conference New Delhi, 3-4 April 2013
The Delhi HM Conference “New Cultures of the Left”, the first South Asian Historical Materialism Conference, will be held at the Conference Centre, Delhi University, on 3-4 April 2013. The conference occurs against several backgrounds that make the revival of the left and the re-emergence of Marxist and other forms of radical theory and politics imperative. These ‘backgrounds’ include the massive convulsions in the world economy from the financial crash of 2008 onwards; the great uprisings in the Arab world that dominated the whole of 2011 with their remarkable mass-based struggles for democracy; the emergence in the West of spontaneous forms of resistance to Austerity politics and its fierce attacks on the lives of millions of people both in and out of employment.
The background to the Conference also includes the consolidation of powerful capitalist interests in countries like India where big business now shapes public policy without the shackles of ‘socialism’, and government and business have jointly undermined the unions, massively casualised labour markets and accelerated the dispossession of whole communities. The consolidation, likewise, of deeply authoritarian tendencies, both secular and religious, that stand for the eradication of existing constitutional democracies and the rights they offer to the mass of citizens in favour of stronger, more repressive states or states reconstructed on non-secular ‘fundamentalist’ lines. And last but not least, the deep crisis of the Party-controlled left and its inability to debate issues in open, democratic and politically creative ways, much less to attract a new generation of workers and youth to the cause of a radical left politics and culture.
The conference is seen as both South Asian and internationalist in a wider sense. We invite papers (20 minute presentations) or panel proposals (for sessions of 1 hr 45 mins) under any of the broad themes below:
1) The legacies of Marx (Marxism as a theoretical/philosophical tradition);
2) Perspectives for socialism in the twenty-first century;
3) The Left, religion, caste & cultural politics today;
4) Violence, war and modernity (including papers on fascism, both historical & contemporary);
5) New debates on sexual politics, and Marxism and Feminism;
6) The return of immiseration: workers, work, land and communities;
7) The crisis and finance capital today;
8) Red & Green: an integration of perspectives;
9) Struggles for democracy;
10) Capitalism and contemporary media cultures;
11) Culture on the Left (Literature, art, film);
12) Histories of the Left and Marxism in South Asia and internationally;
13) New developments in Marxist philosophy;
14) The contemporary relevance of Marx’s Capital.
PDF version at: http://goo.gl/MIA91
Paper abstracts and panel proposals submissions should try and stay within 300 words, and be sent in to: <submissionsdelhihm@gmail.
See also: The End of the Left in India?