Utopia – towards a new political philosophy

Seminar on utopia arranged by the Philosophy Group at CBS

Monday, February 27, 2006 - 09:30 to 17:00

Utopia – towards a new political philosophy

“The word utopia therefore designates that conjunction of philosophy, or of the concept, with the present milieu – political philosophy.” What is Philosophy, p. 100.

This call is Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari’s demand for another political philosophy – also acknowledging, in parentheses after the quote, that ‘perhaps utopia is not the best word. Perhaps it is rather a question of what it means to believe in this world.‘ And, if this is a challenge it is ‘because we no longer believe in the events which happen to us, love, death, as if they only half concerned us’. As such, the world has come to look like a bad film. How can we through our inventive capacities create another sense of time that transgresses the time of measure, the time of the useful, the time of a new scientific management and spin doctored identity politics? Is it not time to introduce the utopian combatant as the true subject for another coming political philosophy, a figure who doesn’t fight to destroy capitalism or the State as such, but who tries to enrich the forces of whatever is available and produce a new vitality?

As this may be true, the Department of Management, Politics and Philosophy nevertheless initiates a small scale conference where the concept is to be reinvestigated.

The concept of Utopia is, in this investigation, by no means reserved for Deleuze and Guattari: thinkers such as Jacques Derrida and the Italian philosopher Giorgio Agamben have in their later works both addressed the question of the coming community, the coming utopia rather than the already accomplished utopia, but an ethical power of hope as a dramatising effect initiating the very gesture of thought, the subject understood as whatever singularity, the path for a radical generosity.

Keynote speakers:


Paul Patton
: BA MA Syd Doctorat D'Universite, Paris VIII professor. School of Philosophy, the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.


Ian Buchanan
: Professor of Comparative Literature, University of Cardiff, UK.


Ole Fogh Kirkeby
: Professor, Dr.phil. Department of Management, Politics and Philosophy, at Copenhagen Business School.

The conference is hosted by lectures Alexander Carnera and

Bent Meier Sørensen - both from the Philosophy Group at CBS.

09:30

Coffee

10:00

Introduction

10:15

Ian Buchanan, Deleuze's 'Life' Sentences

11:30

Ole Fogh Kirkeby, The Utopian Event

12:45

Lunch

13:30

Paul Patton, The Politics of Utopia

14:30

Kent Hansen (artist), Local Utopia – coincidences in art and the social

15:00

Coffee

15:30

Panel discussion, opened by Alexander Carnera and Bent Meier Sørensen

Master Class for Ph.D. Students - February 28th, 10:00 – 13:00.

Copenhagen Business School, Porcelænshaven 18A, Lecture Room 0.116

2000 Frederiksberg

The conference is open for everybody, the master class is for Ph.D. students only.

Registration for both events are needed, deadline is the 17th of February 2006. The conference including lunch is free, but registration is necessary for planning purposes.

For further information and enrolment please contact Christina Busk Thorsen, assistant of the Philosophy Group:

cbt.lpf@cbs.dk

The page was last edited by: Communications // 02/24/2006