11-01-2012 12:01

UPDATED: SECOND CALL FOR APPLICATIONS WITH
DETAILED PROGRAMME AND CONFIRMED LECTURERS
OHRID SUMMER UNIVERSITY 2012
SUMMER INSTITUTE FOR SEXUALITIES, CULTURES, AND POLITICS:
QUEERNESS, COMMUNITY, AND CAPITAL:
TOWARDS NEW ALLIANCES OF THE POLITICAL
(August 12-30, Ohrid, Macedonia)
organized by
Institute for Social Sciences and Humanities “Euro-Balkan”
(Skopje, Macedonia)
in cooperation with
Faculty for Media and Communications at Singidunum University
(Belgrade, Serbia)
Download application form
CONFIRMED LECTURERS:
David M. Halperin (University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA)
Jelisaveta Blagojević (Singidunum University, Belgrade, Serbia)
Tomasz Sikora (Pedagogical University of Cracow, Poland)
Marina Gržinić (Slovenian Academy of Science and Art, Ljubljana, Slovenia / Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna, Austria)
Francesco Macarone Palmieri a.k.a. WARBEAR (independent social anthropologist and multimedia queer artist)
Antke Engel (Institute for Queer Theory, Hamburg/Berlin, Germany)
Jamie Heckert (University of Essex, UK)
COURSES OFFERED:
Queerness, the Political, and Community(Lecturers: David M. Halperin, Jelisaveta Blagojević, Tomasz Sikora)
Arts, Culture, and Resistance(Lecturers: Marina Gržinić, Francesco Macarone Palmieri a.k.a. WARBEAR)
Capital, Consumerism, and Queer Visibility(Lecturer: Antke Engel)
Queering the General Strike and the Occupation(Lecturer: Jamie Heckert)
ELIGIBILITY AND FEE
Participants
should be postgraduate students (preferably MA, PhD student or young
researchers) interested in exploring the issues of Gender, Queer,
Cultural Studies, Visual Arts and Humanities and related Studies.
Participants from all countries are eligible to participate.
Tuition fee: 600 euro.
The fee covers tuition and study material during the school, use of
library and computer room at the Campus with free internet, tour of the
numerous ancient and medieval monuments in the UNESCO protected city of
Ohrid located at the shore of the unforgettably beautiful Ohrid Lake.
Other arrangements for accommodation, transportation and other expenses
should be arranged by applicants on themselves.
Note that
we offer 20% discount if the participant pays the total fee until May
1st and 10% discount if the participant pays the total fee until June
25th (see deadlines below).
Note that we can provide for
the interested participants discount prices for accommodation in Hotel
Pella where the Campus will be located, near the beach. Ohrid also
offers cheap accommodation in private houses. The Summer Institute’s
coordinators will make recommendations and help with arrangements for
accommodation of selected participants.
Maximum number of
students for the Summer Institute is 20. Please note that a course will
not be offered if fewer than 10 students apply by 1st of June.
DEADLINES
Deadline 1 for early applications (20% discount): April 20th / selection results by April 30th / payment due May 10th
Deadline 2 for early applications (10% discount): June 1st / selection results by June 15th / payment due July 25th
Deadline 3 for all other applications (regular fee): July 1st / selection results by July 15th / payment due July 25th
Please send all applications to Slavco Dimitrov and Stanimir Panayotov:
slavco.euba@gmail.com, spanayotov@gmail.com
DURATION
Two and a half week
FORMAT
a) Intensive Lectures and Master classes
b) Afternoon practical sessions
c) Practical presentations and rehearsals for the last night’s concert event as the final presentations of the participants.
SUMMER INSTITUTE DESCRIPTION
The
Summer Institute for Sexualities, Cultures, and Politics is a new
permanent project initiated by the Department for Gender Studies at the
Institute for Social Sciences and Humanities “Euro-Balkan”, Skopje,
Macedonia.
The general aim of the Institute is to gather young
post-graduate students, scholars and teaching staff from both Eastern
and Western Europe and promote a shared platform for research and
trans-disciplinary theoretical reflection on the complex modes of
interweaving sexuality, culture and politics, and consequently of
exchanging and questioning geopolitically determined discourses in the
research of sexualities, gender studies, and queer theory. Our idea is
to provide students, scholars and teachers with the opportunity to
question, decenter and democratize these areas by way of deferring the
notion of theoretical and geopolitical privilege which is often implied
by these research areas, and thus to introduce new models of rethinking
context-specific phenomena related to sexualities and, vice versa, to
enrich theoretical paradigms with context specific phenomena and
research.
In this way, the Institute’s long-term goal is to
(1)
strategically stimulate the particularization and application of key
ideas and theories in sexuality research locally, and to
(2)
universalize and popularize crucial and underprivileged positions and
ideas on the European level, regardless of the East/West divide which is
still central to the development of queer theory and sexuality
research.
Our endeavor is not to relativize the embeddedness and
situatedness of knowledges about sexualities, but to recognize and
disrupt the existing invisible borders that obstruct the free
dissemination of ideas as they are being determined by various hegemonic
forces – political, educational, economic - in both Eastern and Western
contexts of doing academic and artistic work related with our desires,
bodies, and sexualities.
The theme of the 2012 Summer Institute for Sexualities, Cultures, and Politics is:
“Queerness, Community, and Capital: Towards New Alliances of the Political”
In
its first and founding activity in Summer 2012, The Institute for
Sexualities, Cultures, and Politics aims at exploring and reflecting on
the complex entanglements of queer theories and practices, the
Political, and cultures. We will provide space to radically question the
hegemonic regimes of political communities’ institutions/sustenance, as
well as the global and regional regimes of thinking neo-liberal forces.
Hence, the Institute’s goal is to trace the multiple pathways through
which queerness enters or exits the political projects of community
constitution, in its various forms: revived nationalisms, communism’s
legacy and the European community, on the one hand, and the global
neo-liberal markets’ imperatives and their consequent commodification of
identities and processes of de-democratization and de-politicization.
Further,
departing from such a research framework, the Institute aims towards
re-visioning the dominant forms of queer political struggles and
strategies of resistance; also, we want to investigate what are the
possibilities stemming from queerness and its already existing political
embodiments and specific historical experiences? What opportunities
there are in various geopolitical contexts to rethink our shared and
general categories of politics, resistance, and community?
Thus, by
investigating these multiple entanglements, the Institute will be the
host of critical and in-depth analyses of the position queer struggles
have in the wider context of struggles for social justice, economic
redistribution and human rights, and will provoke discussions about the
possibility of envisioning and enacting political alliances beyond the
narrow boundaries of identity politics and the exclusionary logic and
division of recognition and redistribution. Last but not least, we will
particularly raise the question how the political influence of queer is
being neutralized or re-radicalized in existing and allegedly
queer-friendly political settings?
In the course
of 18 days, the wide specter of topics that the Institute covers, are to
be organized into a programme structured on the grounds of four major
subjects. Each programme section includes morning lectures held by
prominent scholars from Europe and SEE, reading seminars, joint
discussions and participants’ presentations.
PROGRAMME SECTIONS
Programme
Section 1: Queerness, the Political, and Community (Lecturers: David M.
Halperin, Jelisaveta Blagojević, Tomasz Sikora)
This programme
subject will try to research, discuss and problematize the complex
interweaving of sexuality, politics and community. The lectures and
discussion will try to explore the position of sexuality in relation to
hegemonic forms of communities, and community, in its Western
conception, in general. Thus, some of the core problems that will be
addressed include the imaginaries, discourses and institutional
practices strategically deployed in communist, as well as nationalist
utopian and communitarian projects, in relation to marginal and
non-hegemonic sexualities (practices, communities and identities) and
non-normative bodies. Further, these communal experiences will be
regarded, differentiated or aligned, in relation to the contemporary
European communal ideals and inspirations, and will further explore the
impact these political apparatuses have on sexual struggles for justice
and recognition. Of particular importance will be the exploration of the
entanglements of governmentality tactics and biopolitical dispositives
and the construction and proliferation of sexual identities, as much as
their compliance or resistance to sexual normalizations. Departing from
contemporary political theories and political philosophy’s scholarship,
the programme will further investigate the following subtopics:
Queerness and the redefinition of the Political; State utopias, justice,
jurisdiction and queer sufferings; Community immunization and queer
exposures; Homonationalisms and (neo)liberalisms; What is the political
in queer politics?, etc.
Programme Section 2: (Queer) Arts,
Culture, and Resistance (Lecturers: Marina Gržinić, Francesco Macarone
Palmieri a.k.a. WARBEAR)
The lectures, presentations and
discussions covered by this programme subject will try to think about
and analyze the multiple cross-cuttings of artistic practices and
cultural production with the sexual regimes defining the common, which
is to say who belongs and who does not belong to a community?, which
emotions and relations are considered as legible?, which bodies are
rendered visible and whose statements are registered as audible?
Departing from a variety of traditional art practices, through new media
deployment, cultural activism, participatory art, different art
collectives, performing and video arts, interventionist artistic actions
and practices of reclaiming public spaces, artists and cultural workers
and activists, we will explore the entire spectrum of tactics and
strategies, forms and media, topics and modes of representation deployed
and how do they contest and reconfigure the dominant political modes of
sexual hierarchy, organization and framing of the common(s) and
community. Not only being a medium for representation, art and cultural
practices are to be observed as fields for making, instituting and
creating, and thus their potential for transfiguring the dominant
regimes of sexual visibility and publics will be saliently explored.
Besides the actualized capacity for breaking with the existing regimes
of relations and making communities otherwise, artworks will be also
critically explored in their being the symbolic and cultural apparatus
for moral and didactic political and sexual appeal as well as for
sustaining current status quo in the dominant modes of communal
relations and sexual inequalities. In this regard, a question of
particular importance will be how current global position of arts and
creative cultures, in relation to neo-liberal and consumerist demands,
influence cultural practices and aesthetic regimes of resistance and
critique in the field of sexuality.
Furthermore, not only art, but
multiplicity of cultural forms and Media cutting through the limits of
community, assigning roles and distributing parts, such as pamphlets,
billboards, city lights, media and video campaigns, public spaces,
social networks etc. will be scrutinized as cultural practices
sustaining sexual normalizations, but also as potential tools for
undoing sexual hegemonies.
Programme Section 3: Capital, Consumerism, and Queer Visibility
(Lecturer: Antke Engel)
This
thematic sub-programme aims to critically explore the complex
entanglements that queer emancipation struggles have with the historical
and global development of capitalist societies and, in particular,
their ubiquitous relation to neo-liberal capitalist rationalities
in consumerist societies and biopolitical paradigms of governmentality.
Hence, we would like to raise discussions on the ambivalent implications
of ‘localization’ as point of departure for emancipation struggles
based on identity politics, their consequent interferences with
hegemonic modes and institutions of neoliberalism and their position in a
wider economic and political narratives, namely their compliance or
resistance with exploitative and unequal local and global modes of
production and economic distribution.
In the frames of this
sub-programme we would further like to explore how have, so called,
transitional processes, including individual rights, neo-liberalization
processes, privatization, consumerism’s progression etc, liberal
ideologies, market driven identitarian segmentations and life-style
imperatives, in post-communist countries, influenced the emergence
of LGBT movements in this region. Overmore, how has this development of
sexual minorities’ movements been linked and related to more general
economic, social and political processes of EU integration.
Programme Section 4: Queering the General Strike and the Occupation
(Lecturer: Jamie Heckert)
What
has emerged as a “movement” – the Occupy Movement – finds itself in a
complex existential state: how does a movement define itself in the
process its own emergence? How does a leaderless movement addresses
society without authority? Occupy bears the mark of radical
disidentification which runs both risks – of self-dissolution and
conceptual expansionism, just as some 20 years ago queer theory emerged
as an “X” which has to be saturated analytically but has been recognized
as existential and ontological hybridity. This resemblance has been
already noted (for example by Michael Warner) and raises pressing
concerns related with the organization of the multitude.
Namely, how
radically open is – and could be – the Occupy? How does the notion of
occupation change when communal and micropolitical interests are
inscribed in it – what makes the occupation queer? Is identity politics
deconstructed from within inside Occupy? What is the status of queer –
particular, universal, zeroed? – in the collective social choreographies
of the general strike and the general intellect? Is Queer too
theoretical and closed a concept to be used as theoretical and
conceptual strategy of paradoxic principle of self-organizing?
THE PROGRAMME CONSISTS OF SEVERAL FEATURES
In regard to
the high standards established by the Euro-Balkan Institute and due to
its membership in the Erasmus Charter, the Summer School will grant the
participants appropriate certificate with 12 credits (ECTS), applicable
in the master studies of participant’s home universities.
]Memorable social events on the campus and at the Ohrid Lake.
Tours
of the numerous ancient and medieval monuments in the UNESCO protected
city of Ohrid, located at the shore of the unforgettably beautiful Ohrid
Lake (covered by the participation fee).
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
Signing
up for the OSU 2012 legally binds the participants to the terms and
conditions. If the tuition fee is not paid by the applicants by 15th of
July, their registration shall automatically be rejected.
]After
applications are processed, “Euro-Balkan” Institute will notify the
applicants in writing (e-mail) whether their application has been
accepted or rejected.
If an accepted participant wishes to withdraw
from the program before it starts, withdrawal must be submitted in
writing to the Ohrid Summer University. If we are unable to reassign the
slot and incur a financial loss due to the withdrawal, a cancellation
fee will be charged to the applicant as follows:
•More than 3 weeks before the program 30% of the tuition fee
•Less than 3 weeks but more than 2 weeks before the program 50% of the tuition fee
•Within 2 weeks of the program 100% of the tuition fee
OHRID SUMMER UNIVERSITY: FURTHER INFO
The
Summer Institute is integral part of Ohrid Summer University (OSU)
which is an academic program for young faculty, PhD candidates,
postgraduates, researchers and professionals, which offers intensive,
problem oriented and research based courses from the domain of social
sciences and humanities. OSU was founded in 1998 and has functioned
continuously since then, as one of the core programs of the
“Euro-Balkan” Institute, involving a significant number of both junior
and senior members of academic communities from various countries. To
date, “Euro-Balkan” Institute, trough OSU program, has organized over 30
summer schools from various areas with over 500 participants, involving
more than 100 professors. During the 14 years-long period of its
existence, OSU has engaged itself in: adequate and effective training of
the academic staff, demonstration of successful linkage of
state-of-the-art scholarship and effective and innovative teaching,
promotion of academic excellence and ability to facilitate creation and
sustenance of active networks of academics, as well as collaborative
advancement of learning in certain disciplines within the international
context.
Located in the city of Ohrid, the centuries-long
cultural metropolis of the Balkan region, OSU encompasses a variety of
social and cultural events, provides appropriate locations for outdoor
classes and includes educative excursions to the famous archaeological
sites and cultural monuments, situated on the shores of the Ohrid Lake.
Download the Summer Institute leaflet
CONTACT PERSONS:
Slavco Dimitrov and Stanimir Panayotov
Coordinators of the Summer Institute
Emails: slavco.euba@gmail.com, spanayotov@gmail.com
Jelisaveta Blagojevic,
Director of the Summer Institute
Email: jelisavetablagojevic@gmail.com
Dragana Karovska
Academic Coordinator of Ohrid Summer University
Email: poslediplomski.euba@gmail.com
Institute for Social Sciences and Humanities “Euro-Balkan”
Blvd. Partizanski Odredi 63, 1000, Skopje, Republic of Macedonia
Tel/Fax. ++ 389 2 30 75 570
Email: poslediplomski.euba@gmail.com
www.euba.edu.mk