CfP: Annual International Conference of the Centre for Phenomenology in South Africa

BSP News Item Thumbnail

Call for papers for the Centre for Phenomenology in South Africa’s annual conference titled Philosophy and Eschatology (11-12 September 2020).

Call for Papers
7th Annual International Conference of the Centre for Phenomenology in South Africa
Philosophy and Eschatology, Or: thinking of/from the end of the world

Organized by Paul Slama, Carien Smith, Justin Sands, Rafael Winkler, and Abraham Olivier

University of Johannesburg, South Africa
11-12 September 2020

Theme:
Eschatology, the narrative of the end of time or the world, is an integral aspect of various intellectual traditions. From the Western theological tradition to Afro-pessimism, it also underlies the modern idea of progress and its dialectical counterpart in Hegel and Marx, as well as the works of authors such as Nietzsche, Husserl, Heidegger, Levinas, Bataille, Blanchot, Derrida, and Jean-Luc Nancy. It has inspired some authors in the phenomenological tradition to rethink the transcendental reduction in order to recover the genesis of the world prior to the birth of consciousness. One of the contributions of eschatology to phenomenology is the insight that the world be thought, in its integrity, unity, or meaning, from the standpoint of its eventual collapse. For Levinas in Totality and Infinity, by contrast, it provides the subject with the standpoint of justice beyond history. Eschatology offers philosophy with (among other things) a way of thinking about the final end or outermost limit, what is most extreme and unsurpassable. It is in its way, much like philosophy, concerned with the limit of the thinkable.
Eschatology has more recently entered the discourse of the ecologist and the eco-phenomenologist on the devastation of the earth, that of the geologist and critical theorist on the Anthropocene, and that of global capitalism and the total catastrophes – natural, social, military, and technological – it threatens to unleash at every instant.
The aim of this conference is to address these and related topics with a specific focus on the relation between philosophy and eschatology, ecology and eco-phenomenology, the critical discourse on global capitalism, the Anthropocene, religion, the end of time, and Afro-pessimism.

Topics of the conference include, but are not limited to:
> Eschatology and religion;
> Eschatology and phenomenology;
> Eschatology and apocalypticism;
> Eschatology, ethics, and political thought;
> Eschatology, Afro-pessimism and African philosophy;
> Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, Blanchot, Heidegger, Derrida, Nancy, Kojève, Bataille;
> African concepts of the end, time, worldhood;
> Critical Race Theory;
> Black theology;
> Ancestry and history;
> Akan, Bantu, and Igbo cosmologies (among others).

Submission:
> Please send a 700 word abstract for blind review to [email protected]. The full paper should be no more than 3500-4000 words for a 35-40 min. presentation. Proposals for panel discussion are also welcome.
> The deadline for submission of abstracts is Wednesday the 15th of April 2020. Notification of acceptance will be sent early May 2020.

Conference fees:
The fee for the full two-day conference (including tea and lunches) for participants is R1500 (including VAT). It is R750 for the full two-day conference for all participating graduate and PhD students.

Bursaries:
A limited number of bursaries will be available for travel and accommodation.

Accommodation:
The organizers recommend that conference participants stay in the Melville area in Johannesburg, which is within walking distance from UJ Auckland Park Campus. The current rate for B&Bs in the Melville area is R600 per person per night.

For more information about the conference, please visit the website of the Centre for Phenomenology in South Africa. Alternatively, please contact one of the organizers: Paul Slama ([email protected]), Carien Smith ([email protected]), Justin Sands ([email protected]), Rafael Winkler ([email protected]), or Abraham Olivier ([email protected]).