A Two-Day Symposium, 6th and 7th of January 2013, Lucerne, Switzerland
The publication in English and in German of Michel Foucault’s lectures at the Collège de France in the years 1970-1984 has been a key driver of the recent renaissance of research inspired by his work across the social sciences. As part of this, sociologists, geographers and others in the academic world have begun to draw on and work with a wider range of Foucauldian concepts than in earlier studies. Foucault’s thinking on power/knowledge, panopticism, discourse, the role of the sciences, and so on still resonates strongly across the social sciences but it is the topics that he lectured on at the Collège that arguably attract the bulk of attention: a surge of interest has occurred among social scientists in his writings on apparatuses/dispositifs, governmentality, self-government and ethics to name but a few concepts. The translation of the lectures into German and English has also brought to the fore a greater focus on the liveliness of the world, the non-discursive realm, materiality and resistance than Foucault is usually credited for. In fact, and as Philo (2012) has noted, the lectures show more than his published books that Foucault was closer to Deleuze than is often assumed.
Foucault’s work has been employed and embraced enthusiastically by ‘mobilities’ scholars (e.g. Adey, 2009; A. Jensen, 2011; Merriman, 2007; Paterson, 2008, Richardson and Jensen, 2008; Schwanen et al, 2011; Manderscheid, 2012). It can nonetheless be argued that mobilities researchers have not yet fully explored or exhausted the potential of Foucault’s philosophy for understanding mobilities. Against this background we seek to bring together scholars from across the social sciences with a shared interest in both mobilities and Foucauldian thinking. Mobilities are here understood broadly as the flows (or lack thereof) of people, artefacts, money, ideas, practices, and so on across a wide variety of spatial and temporal scales, both in contemporary societies or in the past. More specifically, we are soliciting conceptual and/or empirical papers that address one or several of the following topics or a related theme:
- The governmentalities that shape mobilities
- The government of im/mobile others and selves
- Mobility dispositifs
- Mobile subjectivities
- Formation and contestation of material landscapes of mobilities
- Ethics of mobility and mobile ethics
- Discourses surrounding and underpinning mobilities
- Mobilities as an object of knowledge
- The ‘disciplining’ of mobilities
- Techniques of im/mobility and im/mobile techniques
- Conceptualisation of mobilities in regards to biopolitics and territory
The two-day symposium aims at connecting scholars from different disciplines with an interest in this range of topics. If you are interested in participating in this event with a paper, we ask that you prepare an abstract of no more than 250 abstract and send this to one of the organisers no later than 10th of June 2012.
Katharina Manderscheid, Lucerne University (katharina.manderscheid@unilu.ch)
Tim Schwanen, University of Oxford (tim.schwanen@ouce.ox.ac.uk)
David Tyfield, Lancaster University (d.tyfield@lancaster.ac.uk)