All posts by Michael Lewis

About Michael Lewis

Michael Lewis teaches Philosophy at the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne.

Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship in Philosophy at Newcastle

Applications are invited for a Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship in Philosophy at Newcastle University. Information on the Department is available here: https://www.ncl.ac.uk/philosophy/about/

More generic information from the university as follows:

In January 2020, Leverhulme Trust will re-open the scheme for applications to the Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowships.  This scheme offers 50% match-funding for salary costs of three-year academic research position for an early career researcher to undertake a significant piece of publishable work.  This opportunity aims to provide career development for those who are at a relatively early stage of their academic careers, but who have a proven record of research.  Approximately 100 fellowships will be available each year.

Philosophical Studies can nominate one candidate from all the applications they receive, to be put forward for support by the central university. And our deadline is 12 noon on Friday 24th January 2020, so please do get your applications in to michael.lewis@newcastle.ac.uk well before that, preferably by early January.

Brighton and Sussex conference: Critical Theory in (a Time of) Crisis

CAPPE (University of Brighton) and SSPT (University of Sussex)

Critical Theory in (a Time of) Crisis

A two-day postgraduate and early career conference, organised by the Centre for Applied Philosophy, Politics & Ethics (University of Brighton) and the Research Centre for Studies in Social and Political Thought (University of Sussex)

Sponsored by the Mind Association

Keynote speakers: Michael J. Thompson (author of The Domestication of Critical Theory) and Darrow Schechter (author of Critical Theory in the Twenty-First Century)

5th and 6th November 2019

Room 318b, Grand Parade, University of Brighton

9.00 to 5.30 (both days)

ALL WELCOME

Please contact Tom Bunyard (t.bunyard@brighton.ac.uk) or Denis Chevrier-Bosseau (d.chevrier-bosseau@sussex.ac.uk) for further details

Day 1

09.00 – 09.15 – Registration 

09.15 – 11.00 – PANEL 1 

Paul Ingram: The Institutionalization of Adorno and the Viability of Social Pathology. 

Cain Shelley: Freeing Socialism from its Attachment to Marx? Honneth’s Recent Political Turn and its Limits.

Neil Harris: Beyond Domestication: Adorno and the Reanimation of Social Pathology Diagnosis 

11.00 – 11.15: break

11.15 to 13.00 – PANEL 2 

Luke Edmeads: Adorno’s relevance: Non-identity as a Response to Domination in Contemporary Society.

Alena Roth:Re-thinking Social Transformation: Utopian Consciousness within Critical Theory. 

Muhammad Qasim:  An Anticolonial Deficit in Critical Theory and a Need for a De-Colonial Turn in It. 

13.00 – 14.00 – Lunch break 

14.00 – 15.30 – PANEL 3  

Sabrina Muchová: Art and Democracy: Wellmer’s Aesthetic Conception. 

Aikaterini-Maria Lakka: Understanding Intellectuals’ Role in a Time of Crisis. 

15.30 – 15.45: break

15.45 – 17.15 – Keynote 

Prof. Michael J. Thompson (William Paterson University, US): Critique of Crisis of the Crisis of Critique? Rethinking the Project of Critical Theory

Day 2

09.00 – 10.45 – PANEL 4 

Paul Ewart:Capitalist Realism, Popular Critical Theory and New Left Movements.

Roderick Howlett: Reclaiming the Radical Enlightenment: A Response to Post-Truth. 

David Gould:  Critical Theory in a Time of Crisis: What is a Crisis? 

10.45 – 11.00: break

11.00 – 12.45 – PANEL 5 

Ben Cross: Justice, Social Justice, and Critical Theory: Why Activists have got it Right, and Analytic Philosophers have got it Wrong. 

Jacopo Condo’:  Mental Health and the Limits of Procedural Conceptions of Autonomy in Critical Theories. 

Joseph Backhouse-Barber: ‘Making the social play along’: Luhmann’s Recognition of both Subjective and Social Aspects of Experience.

12.45 – 1.45: Lunch break

13.45 – 15.00 – PANEL 6 

Sara Kermanian:  Time and the Politics of International Imaginaries: Rethinking the Impasse of the Derridean Critique of Modern Temporality.

Harrison Lechley-Yuill: Deconstruction: The Proper and Violence.

15.00 – 15.15: break

15.15 – 17.00: Keynote

Prof. Darrow Schecter (University of Sussex): On the sociology of functional differentiation: What kind of dialectics underpin a critical theory of contemporary society’? 

17.00 – 18.45 – Wine Reception with philosophical poetry reading by Emeritus Prof. Christopher Norris (University of Cardiff). 

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Australasian Postgraduate Philosophy Conference – Deadline 31st October

The Australasian Postgraduate Philosophy Conference (APPC) is an annual conference that provides an opportunity for postgraduate philosophy students from Australia, New Zealand, and Singapore to present their work, debate their ideas, receive feedback from peers and form collaborations across institutions. And in 2019 APPC will be hosted by Victoria University of Wellington from Friday the 6th of December to Sunday the 8th of December. The conference website is https://www.appc2019.com/
The deadline of the call for papers is 31 October.