Benjamin in Palestine: On the Place and Non-Place of Radical Thought
Ramallah/Palestine, Dec. 6-11, 2015
Venue: Goethe Institute Ramallah and other venues in Ramallah (tbd)
Talking about Walter Benjamin in today’s Palestine is a political act. This project is part of the attempt to break the de facto cultural and academic boycott of Palestine, implemented and enforced by the occupation regime and its multi-layered web of checkpoints, territorial zones and other juridical-administrative measures. If in Benjamin’s heterodox Marxism the different strands of Jewish messianic and libertarian-utopian thought form a relationship of “elective affinity” (Michael Löwy), his name and legacy invoke a constant appeal against the arrogance of any state power and representations of victors’ history. In this vein, Benjamin’s texts speak not only to the international community of Benjamin scholars and critical theorists but also to political struggles in Palestine.
The project is comprised of three events: an opening event on Benjamin’s thought and life (Dec. 6), a workshop on key texts of Benjamin (Dec. 7-9), and an international conference (Dec. 10/11).
The conference will involve international and local scholars from the fields of Benjamin studies and critical theory as well as activists, writers and artists who work on aesthetics, political economy, political theology, decolonization, critical legal studies, critique of human rights discourse, architecture and the occupation, memory and political struggle, Nakba, diaspora experience, and the situation of refugees in Palestine and the Middle East.
At this time we are calling for participation in the three-day workshop on selected Benjamin texts (Dec. 7-9). The aim of this workshop is to bring together readers of Benjamin as well as activists working in the context of the Palestinian struggle to discuss and learn with each other. The conference that follows will build on this discussion and the insights that emerge from the workshop. The texts selected for the workshop are those that speak to the current situation in Palestine and the Middle East. Key texts that have been selected thus far include Benjamin’s “Critique of Violence”, “Theses On the Concept of History”, “The Task of the Translator”, “Capitalism as Religion” and the “Kafka” essay.” We are seeking proposals to introduce one of these texts or another text of your choice. Alternatively, if you wish to make an intervention or presentation that is thematic, rather than text-based, please write to us with a short proposal (before July 31, 2015).
The workshop will be held in English. However, we are seeking funding which would allow us to provide a simultaneous translation (English to Arabic), with the ultimate goal of producing new translations from the German original texts into Arabic.
More Information here