Subject
to Change: Nature, Text, and the Limits of the Human
The University of Virginia Department of English Graduate
Conference
March 22-24, 2013
March 22-24, 2013
We invite you to
join us as we explore the ontological, environmental, ethical, and aesthetic
implications of living in a world in which the primacy of the human has been
called into question.
What does it mean to read an object if we, too, are objects? Do inanimate subjects have a claim to the agency that humans have usually taken to be theirs alone? How are artists and scholars supposed to see into the life of things: the animal, the synthetic, the digital, the inert, the abject? How do we read after nature in a world of things?
What does it mean to read an object if we, too, are objects? Do inanimate subjects have a claim to the agency that humans have usually taken to be theirs alone? How are artists and scholars supposed to see into the life of things: the animal, the synthetic, the digital, the inert, the abject? How do we read after nature in a world of things?
Keynote Speech by Timothy Morton
A Roundtable Discussion with
Timothy Morton and University
of Virginia professors
Bruce Holsinger and Jennifer
Wicke
Subjects (or is
it objects?) of interest include, but are not limited to:
-Object-oriented ontology and the "democracy of objects"
-Whither the human?
-The anthropocene and anthropocentrism
-Nature and the unnatural
-Systems and ecosystems, digital
and analog, network and wetwork
-Animism and a living world
-Environment and catastrophe
-Dark ecology and black ecology
-Environment and catastrophe
-Dark ecology and black ecology
-Speculative Realism
-Posthumanism
-Posthumanism
-Feminist and
postcolonial possibilities after nature
-Translation and metaphor
-Translation and metaphor
-Textual history; books as physical objects
-Words for things/things for words
-Humanities without the human
-Humanities without the human
-New ecology and community
-Ethics and bioethics in a posthuman world
-The limits of the body
-Animalism
-Monstrosity
-Conceptual art and L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poetry
-Natural supernaturalism
-Goethean science
-Ethics and bioethics in a posthuman world
-The limits of the body
-Animalism
-Monstrosity
-Conceptual art and L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E poetry
-Natural supernaturalism
-Goethean science
-The sublime; Romanticism and its afterlife
This conference is
interdisciplinary: We welcome submissions from a variety of fields. Send an abstract (of up to 350 words) for
your 15-minute presentation to gesaconference2013@gmail.com. Include your name and institutional affiliation.
Responses are due by November
30, 2012.
Find more information, updates, and a growing forum on the
nonhuman at
Timothy Morton is Rita Shea Guffey Chair of English at
Rice University. He is the author of Hyperobjects:
Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World (forthcoming), Realist Magic: Objects, Ontology, Causality
(forthcoming), The Ecological Thought
(2010), Ecology without Nature
(2007), seven other books and eighty essays on philosophy, ecology, literature,
food, and music.
Bruce Holsinger is Professor of English at the University of Virginia. He is the author of Neomedievalism, Neoconservatism, and the War on Terror (2007), The Premodern Condition (2005) and Music, Body, and Desire in Medieval Culture (2001). His interests include Critical Theory and Medieval Literature.
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