Alternative Global Geographies, Imagining and Re-Imagining the World late 19th century - present day

Alternative Global Geographies, Imagining and Re-Imagining the World late 19th century - present day

Organizer
AHRC Project ‘Socialism Goes Global’ in cooperation with the GWZO Leipzig and the Centre for Area Studies Leipzig
Venue
Leipzig
Location
Leipzig
Country
Germany
From - Until
13.11.2015 - 14.11.2015
By
Devenish, Catherine

In contrast to public claims of the early 1990s, space and geographies have not lost their central role in defining an ever more globalized world. We still live in territorialized spaces: not only in the narrow sense of states and societies that reside within their borders, but also geographies and spatial formats on regional and world scales. Research in the aftermath of the spatial turn in the humanities and social sciences is increasingly drawing our attention to the importance of understanding large-scale spatial dynamics for global history.

Many influential paradigms, often emerging from metropolitan cores or centres of the Cold War, have emerged to make sense of an increasingly interconnected world. These have included Euro- and other ‘centric’ centre-periphery models, the idea of the Anglophone or Francophone worlds, the tricontinental model, World Systems Theory, or the division of the globe into the First, Second, and Third Worlds, or the ‘Global North and South’. Such ideas came not only from the academy (in e.g. geography, area studies, history, economics, anthropology) but also from the work of political, economic and cultural actors. This conference will explore such attempts to make sense of the world on a regional or global scale, and explore how such ideas have been used to make sense of, and organize, power relations, cultural encounters and economic connections.

Programm

Friday, 13 November

12.30 – 13.30pm Arrival and Registration
13.30 – 14.15 Opening roundtable
Matthias Middell (Leipzig)
Katja Naumann (Leipzig)
Others to be confirmed.

Panel 1
14.30 – 16.00 Re-envisioning the ‘World System’
Quinn Slobodian (Wellesley), Neoliberal Geographic: The World Economy Against the Nation from Bernhard Harms to Herbert Giersch
James Mark (Exeter), Architects of the Semi-Periphery: Hungarian Reform Economists and the Re-Imagining of the World System, 1970-1995
Adam Kola (Toruń), Marian Małowist: World History on the Socialist Semi-Peripheries

16.00 Refreshments

Panel 2
16.30 – 18.00: Challenging Eurocentrism/ Western-centrism
Madeleine Elfenbein (Chicago), Islamism as Counter-Hegemony and as Imperial Ideology: The Writings of Namık Kemal and Ali Suavi
Jonathan Crossen (Waterloo), Indigenous Internationalism: The Fourth World as an alternative to Westphalian sovereignty
Dimitry Shlapentokh (Indiana), The Creation of Mongolian Commonwealth: The Case of Post-Soviet Russia and Eurasianism

Saturday, 14 November

Panel 3
09.00 – 10.15: Disputed Cartographies
Christian Lotz (Marburg), Mapping a socialist world. Conflict and cooperation during the Cold War and the production of the Karta Mira (World Map) 1:2.500.000
Pascale Siegrist (Konstanz), Is There an Anarchist Geography in the Nineteenth Century?

Panel 4
10.30 – 12.00: World History, World Culture - Re-Imagining Global Narratives, Recentering the World
Paul Betts (Oxford), The Dream of Socialist Antiquity: African Anthropology and Art from an East German Perspective
Corinne Geering (Giessen), World Culture in the Making: UNESCO and the Politics of International Cultural Cooperation during late Socialism
David Bryan (Birkbeck), Re-imagining the world in Franco’s Spain: Empire, Hispanidad and global Catholicism.

Panel 5
13.00 – 14.30: Latin America: Transregional Circulations and Revolutionary Thought
Thomas Lindner (Berlin), Imagining the anti-imperialist world. Globalized visions from Latin America during the 1920s
David Mayer (Amsterdam), Re-mapping 20th century Marxism – the example of historiographic debates in the radical 1960s in Latin America
Paolo Capuzzo (Bologna), Geo-cultural maps of revolution: Gramsci, Marategui, Sultan-Galiev

Panel 6
14.45 – 15.45: Imagining an anti-imperialist world
Nemanja Radonjic (Belgrade), „From Kragujevac to Kilimanjaro“ - imagining and reimagining Africa in Socialist Yugoslavia’s travelogues
Elizabeth Banks (New York), The Struggle is Shared: Revolution, Socialism and Transnational Vision in Mozambican Media Space 1965-80

Panel 7
16.15 – 17.45: Carriers of Geographical Imaginaries: Activists, Students, Movements
Caroline Moine (Paris), Imagining a world of solidarity. Situating the Chilean cause in the debates on North-South and East-West-relations in the 1970s
Tatiana Smirnova (Paris), Reconceptualization of the “socialist world” in Niger
Zsófia Lóránd (Florence), Looking at “Global Sisterhood” Through the Lens of Feminists in Yugoslavia

17.45 – 18.15
Summing up, future plans

19.30 Informal Dinner

Contact (announcement)

Catherine Devenish, University of Exeter
Email: C.Devenish@exeter.ac.uk

http://socialismgoesglobal.exeter.ac.uk/
Editors Information
Published on
17.10.2015
Classification
Regional Classification
Additional Informations
Country Event
Language(s) of event
English
Language of announcement