Radical Archaeology Theory Symposium 2016: Radical Ontologies for the Contemporary Past
Binghamton University
3-6 March 2016
Abstract deadline: January 15th 2015
Recently, anthropologists have been trying to challenge Western practices of knowledge production and understandings of existence. The theoretical oppositions at the core of Western thinking gave way to relational and new materialist endeavors. The so-called “ontological turn” has opened doors to investigate the ways social scientists perform, produce, and disseminate their research. For instance, many archaeologists saw this process as an opportunity to go back to things and rethink archaeology as an ontological practice in itself, in which the reassembling of objects defines forms of being and becoming. However, very little has been discussed about its political implications and what seems to be a fethishization of the word “ontology”. These recent debates encourage scholars working with the materialities of the recent past to think about their responsibilities in the quest for alternative forms of being.
The Radical Archaeology Theory Symposium (R.A.T.S.) 2016 is intended as a forum to discuss the politics and ethics of the “ontological turn” and its impacts on the archaeologies of the contemporary past. We invite participants to discuss archaeology as a practice of becoming, and how it can trigger larger social engagements with the politics and ethics of the contemporary past. Issues to be addressed may include, among others:
– The relevance of ontological-oriented analyses of the contemporary past – Politics of ontology as practical ethics
– Activist and community-based archaeologies.
Papers presenting case studies, and from intersecting fields are particularly welcomed.
Submit your abstract up to 250 words, along with your name, contact, institutional
affiliation and three keywords, by January 15th 2015. The selection of papers will be announced during the first week of February 2016.
Keynote speakers:
Maria Theresia Starzmann
McGill University, Canada
Ruth Van Dyke
Binghamton University, New York
Severin Fowles
Columbia University, New York
Þóra Pétursdóttir
University of Tromsø, Norway
Organization committee:
Maura Bainbridge
Rui Gomes Coelho
radicalarchaeology@gmail.com

be cool if they would record this
I’ll talk with the organizers and see what they have planned. It’s a small student-run conference, so not a ton of resources, but maybe they can work something out – maybe at least record the keynotes… If so, I’ll try to remember to post videos here once they get uploaded.
that would be good thanks, tim morton’s audio recordings of his talks seem pretty lo-tech but are quite useful and much appreciated, should be the standard for academics i think to make the work public.
this could be of interest in that project: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1467-9655.12151/full
Mol talks of ontology/realities partly b/c she likes to tweak folks/terms but might more useful/accurate to talk in terms of umwelten.
Reblogged this on My Desiring-Machines and commented:
As someone who is primarily interested in how we do social science — urban studies in my case — I am very excited to see that this is happening.
did you catch:
http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/researchingsociology/2015/12/11/are-we-living-in-an-urban-vortex-an-interview-with-suzi-hall-2-of-2/
?
I missed that, thanks!