2016-03-01

2011 Fifth Annual Feminist Theory Workshop


source: DukeWomenStudies's channel   上次更新日期:2011年7月9日
The 2011 Fifth Annual Feminist Theory two day Workshop took place on March 18th and 19th at Duke University. The Welcome and Remarks were presented by Ranjana Khanna, the Margaret Taylor Smith Director of Women's Studies and Professor of English, Literature and Women's Studies at Duke University.

RANJANA KHANNA Welcome and Opening Remarks 15:27
ANNAMARIE JAGOSE -Keynote Speaker 1:37:51
ROSALIND MORRIS - Keynote Speaker 1:41:24
DONNA HARAWAY- Keynote Speaker 1:24:34

Understanding Gayatri Spivak's "Can the Subaltern Speak"

# automatic playing for the 10 videos (click the up-left corner for the list)

source: drjasonjcampbell    2011年4月10日
http://jasonjcampbell.org/uploads/The...
Jason J. Campbell (Nova Southeastern University)

Matthew Barney & Homi K. Bhabha


source: MOCA    2015年10月21日
Matthew Barney and Homi K. Bhabha
Sunday, October 11, 2015
In conjunction with his solo exhibition at MOCA, artist Matthew Barney engages in conversation with Scholar Homi K. Bhabha. Bhabha is Anne F. Rothenberg Professor of the Humanities at Harvard University and author of numerous works exploring postcolonial theory, among other themes. Barney and Bhabha discuss the River of Fundament project, exploring the film’s conceptions of narrative, cartography and mythology; the relationship of materials to memory; and Barney’s interest in turning time— from the temporality of history to the durational experience of a performance—into a sculptural object.

'Between the unspeakable and the speculum: Poetry and Psychoanalysis


source: University of Essex    2014年4月30日
An open seminar, hosted by our Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies, featuring John Gale, Chief Executive of Community Housing and Therapy.
Abstract: "In his discussion of the Homeric epic Professor Jaeger, in 1939, noted that according to Hölderlin 'that which endures is the work of the poet and his words express the law'. This paper will be a reflection on what endures and on the archaeology of utterance - an archaeology that is intimately connected to castration. As a Symbolic artefact poetry stands between the darkness of the unknowable -- Freud's navel -- and Lacan's mirror of semblance in which false architectures of the self emerge as a parody of the truth. Drawing on a number of writers including Hopkins, Tagore and Celan it is suggested here that it is at the point where poetic and analytic discourse intersect with truth that the complicity between these heterologies can be seen."
To find out more about our Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies go to: http://www.essex.ac.uk/cps/

Psychoanalysis vs Therapy - On Two Contrasting Discursivities December 7...


source: Simon Fraser University    2013年1月30日
On the basis of Lacan's characterization of the Discourse of the Analyst, this seminar will contrast Psychoanalytic and Therapeutic practices. Three questions will be approached. Is the analyst a clinician? How does the analyst listen? Under what conditions might analytic practice take place beyond the analyst's consulting room?
We strongly recommend those interested in attending either (or both) seminars be present also at Dr. Mayer-Foulkes' inaugural lecture, which will furnish various premises to be developed in the course of the seminars.
This event is co-sponsored by the Lacan Salon of Vancouver, Dept. of English at SFU, and The Institute for the Humanities, SFU
http://sfuwoodwards.ca/index.php/comm...

Radical Thinkers: The Art, Sex and Politics of Feminism


source: Tate     2015年3月27日
This panel discussion addresses the legacy of feminist art and theory and its enduring relevance to contemporary struggles. The event is chaired by artist Sonia Boyce and speakers include Lynne Segal, author of 'Straight Sex', and Professor Griselda Pollock.

Forty years ago, feminist thinkers and artists interrogated the role of women as workers and producers and the representation of women in art. What happened to the new worlds of possibility promised by the women¹s liberation and second wave feminist movements of the twentieth century?

Lynne Segal is Anniversary Professor of Psychology and Gender Studies in the Department of Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck College. Her many books include Out of Time: The Pleasures and Perils of Ageing and Straight Sex: Rethinking the Politics of Pleasure. She co-wrote Beyond the Fragments: Feminism and the Making of Socialism with Sheila Rowbotham and Hilary Wainwright.

Griselda Pollock is Professor of Social and Critical Histories of Art and Director of the Centre for Cultural Analysis, Theory and History at the University of Leeds, and is known for her consistent exploration of feminist theory and cultural analysis.

The Four Discourses & the Ethics of Psychoanalysis


source: Jacques Siboni    2014年4月2日
Lecture at the GIFRIC in San Francisco on Jacques Lacan
animated by Jacques B. Siboni & John Gasperoni
Lutecium & Topologos, Paris, San Francisco
March 09, 2014