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dear all,
this looks quite interesting re recent conversations (despite the couch-
based orientation!)
Ruth.C
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Date: Sat, 19 Feb 2000 17:02:59 +0000
From: Norman Holland <PSYART@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: PSYART@xxxxxxxxxxxxx, nholland@xxxxxxx
Subject: RECOGNITION CONFERENCE (Schedule and Profiles)
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From:
Stephen Grosz <grosz=40compuserve.com>
5:37 AM
RECOGNITION
Psychoanalysis and the Politics of Identity
The Institute of Psycho-Analysis and the Forum for European Philosophy
will hold a conference at the Institut Fran=E7ais, 17 Queensberry Place,
London SW7
Saturday and Sunday, 3 & 4 June 2000.
FRIDAY EVENING
OPEN HOUSE & REGISTRATION The Institute of Psycho-Analysis
Byron House 112A Shirland Road London W2 FROM 6-8
SATURDAY MORNING Co-Chair Catherine Audard & Stephen Grosz
08.30 REGISTRATION
09.00 INTRODUCTION TO THE CONFERENCE
Catherine Audard
Stephen Grosz
09.30 THE NEED FOR RECOGNITION
ON THE MUTUAL DEPENDENCY OF PSYCHOANALYSIS AND SOCIAL THEORY
Axel Honneth
10.10 WHOS BEEN SITTING IN MY CHAIR?
Juliet Mitchell
10.50 COFFEE
11.15 DISCUSSION
12.30 LUNCH
SATURDAY AFTERNOON Chair Sebastian Gardner
01.30 WHAT IS THINKING? MIND, REALITY AND THE INTERPERSONAL WORLD
Marcia Cavell
02.10 RECOGNITION OF IDENTITY OR RECOGNITION OF STATUS?
Nancy Fraser
02.35 TEA
03.00 DISCUSSION
04.15 END OF FIRST DAY
SUNDAY MORNING Chair Hanna Segal
09.00 THE SCARS OF HUMILIATION
Avishai Margalit
09.40 THE DEATH DRIVE AND THE RECOGNITION OF AGGRESSION
Jonathan Lear
10.20 COFFEE
10.45 DISCUSSION
12.00 LUNCH
SUNDAY AFTERNOON Chair Jonathan R=E9e
01.00 RECOGNITION: FINDING AVENUES BETWEEN ONE-WAY STREETS
Jessica Benjamin
01.40 DO GROUPS NEED RECOGNITION AS MUCH AS INDIVIDUALS?
David Archard
02.20 TEA
02.45 DISCUSSION
03.45 PANEL DISCUSSION
04.45 CLOSING
Registration Fee before 1 April: =A385 per person (=A335 student) =
Thereafter
=A3110 per person (=A350 student)
Open House at The Institute of Psycho-Analysis, Coffee and Tea are
included.
Tickets can be ordered from Ann Glynn +44 171 563-5017 e-mail:
113367.3062=40compuserve.com.
Or direct, on-line from:
http://www.psychoanalysis.org.uk
As space is limited, early booking is recommended.
Profiles of Speakers and Chairs
DAVID ARCHARD is Reader in the Department of Moral Philosophy at the
University of St Andrews. His books include Consciousness and the
Unconscious (1984) Children, Rights and Childhood (1993) and Sexual =
Consent
(1998). He has published numerous articles in social, political and moral
philosophy. He is currently Director of the Centre for Philosophy and
Public Affairs at the University of St Andrews, Reviews Editor of the
Philosophical Quarterly, and co-editor of a new Routledge Series
Introductions to Contemporary Political Philosophy. He is currently
researching the significance and value of community within contemporary
political philosophy.
CATHERINE AUDARD is chair of the Forum for European Philosophy which was
set up in 1996 in London as an interdepartmental organisation dedicated to
the promotion of dialogue between philosophers in Britain and the rest of
Europe. She teaches moral and political philosophy at the London School of
Economics and at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in =
Paris.
She is also an associated researcher at the CREA in Paris. Her most recent
book is Anthologie historique et critique de l=27utilitarisme in three
volumes (1999). She has co-edited Individu et justice sociale (1988) and
has edited Le Respect (1993). She has also published numerous articles on
utilitarianism, liberalism, citizenship and justice. Her translaions, from
English into French, include John Rawls=27 Theory of Justice (1987),
Political Liberalism (1995), a collection of Rawls earlier papers under =
the
title Justice et D=E9mocratie (1993) and, most recently, JS Mill=27s
Utilitarianism (1998).
JESSICA BENJAMIN is a psychoanalyst in private practice in New York City.
She is a faculty member and supervisor at the New York University
Postdoctoral Psychology Program in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy and
teaches at the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research
Program in Psychoanalysis. She is best known as the author of The Bonds of
Love: Psychoanalysis, Feminism and the Problem of Domination. Her recent
books are Like Subjects, Love Objects: Essays on Recognition and Sexual
Difference (1995) and Shadow of the Other: Intersubjectivity and Gender in
Psychoanalysis (1998). She is a panellist on Psybc.com, an internet
discussion by psychoanalysts of recent journal articles, and an associate
editor of the new journal Studies in Gender and Sexuality.
MARCIA CAVELL is a fourth year candidate at the San Francisco
Psychoanalytic Institute and in private practice in Berkeley, California.
Before coming to California, she taught philosophy for many years in New
York City, where she was also a Research Candidate at the Columbia
University Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research. A frequent
visiting lecturer in philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley
and the author of numerous articles on philosophy and psychoanalysis, she
is currently commissioning and editing a series of pieces on philosophical
subjects that will be appearing in the International Journal of
Psychoanalysis. The first of these articles, by Cavell herself, Knowledge,
Consensus and Uncertainty appeared in December 1999. She is the author of
The Psychoanalytic Mind: from Freud to Philosophy (1991).
NANCY FRASER is Henry A and Louise Loeb Professor of Politics and
Philosophy in the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research
and co-editor of the journal Constellations. Her books include Justice
Interruptus: Critical Reflections on the =22Postsocialist=22 Condition =
(1997)
and Unruly Practices: Power, Discourse and Gender in Contemporary Social
Theory (1989). She is also the co-author of Feminist Contentions: A
Philosophical Exchange (1994) and the co-editor of Revaluing French
Feminism: Critical Essays on Difference, Agency, and Culture (1992). This
year she will publish Adding Insult to Injury: Social Justice and the
Politics of Recognition, edited by Kevin Olson and Redistribution or
Recognition? A Political-Philosophical Exchange, co-authored with Axel
Honneth.
SEBASTIAN GARDNER is Lecturer in the Department of Philosophy at University=
College London, having previously been Lecturer in the Department of
Philosophy at Birkbeck College, London. He is the author of Irrationality
and the Philosophy of Psychoanalysis (1993), Kant and the =27Critique of =
Pure
Reason=27 (1999), and articles on the philosophy of psychoanalysis,
philosophy of mind, aesthetics, and modern European philosophy. He is a
member of the Editorial Committee of the European Journal of Philosophy.
STEPHEN GROSZ is a member and Honorary Librarian of the British
Psycho-Analytical Society. Before training as a psychoanalyst he studied
philosophy at the University of California, Berkeley, Oxford University =
and
University College London. In addition to teaching at the Institute of
Psycho-Analysis, he teaches philosophy in the Psychoanalysis Unit at
University College London. He is in full-time private practice.
AXEL HONNETH is Professor for Social Philosophy at the Goethe-University =
in
Frankfurt/Main. Before coming to Frankfurt, he taught Philosophy at the
University of Konstanz and at the Free University of Berlin. Trained in
Sociology and Philosophy, Axel Honneth is a member of the Advisory Board =
of
the Institut f=FCr Sozialforschung in Frankfurt/Main. He is on the =
Editorial
Board of the European Journal of Philosophy, the Deutsche Zeitschrift =
f=FCr
Philosophie and Constellations. His books include Human Nature and Social
Action (co-authored with Hans Joas) (1989), Critique of Power (1993), The
Struggle for Recognition (1996) and The Fragmented World of the Social
(1995).
JONATHAN LEAR is the John U Nef Distinguished Service Professor at the
Committee on Social Thought at the University of Chicago. Before coming to
Chicago, Professor Lear taught at Yale and at the University of Cambridge
where he was a Fellow of Clare College, and Director of Studies in
Philosophy. A practising psychoanalyst, he is a member of the
International Psychoanalytical Association and on the editorial board of
the International Journal of Psychoanalysis. His books include Aristotle:
The Desire to Understand (1988), Love and its Place in Nature: A
Philosophical Interpretation of Freudian Psychoanalysis (1990) and Open
Minded, Working out the Logic of the Soul (1998). His new book Happiness,
Death and the Remainder of Life will be published by Harvard University
Press later this year.
AVISHAI MARGALIT is Professor of Philosophy at the Hebrew University in
Jerusalem. He has held visiting positions at Harvard University, Wolfson
College and St.Antony=27s College in Oxford, the Max Planck Institute and
the Free University in Berlin; most recently he has been a Rockefeller
Fellow at the Center for Human Values, Princeton University. In May 1999 =
he
delivered the University of Frankfurt=27s Horkheimer Lectures, on The =
Ethics
of Memory. He is the author of numerous articles on a variety of
philosophical topics, including philosophy of language, logical paradoxes
and rationality, social and political philosophy, and the philosophy of
religion. His books include Idolatry (jointly with Moshe Halbertal, 1992),
The Decent Society (1996), and Views in Review (1998). He has also edited
Meaning and Use, Isaiah Berlin: A Celebration (jointly with Edna
Ullmann-Margalit) and, in German, Amnestie (jointly with Garry Smith).
Avishai Margalit is a frequent contributor to the New York Review of =
Books
and a founding member of Peace Now, of which he is an active member.
JULIET MITCHELL is a member of the British Psycho-Analytical Society and
fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge University. A practising psychoanalyst,
she has written on psychoanalysis, literary theory and the political =
theory
of women=27s oppression. Her books include Psychoanalysis and Feminism
(1974), Women=27s Estate (1972), Whos Afraid of Feminism? (co-edited with =
Ann
Oakley, 1996), The Selected Melanie Klein (edited, 1986), Women: The
Longest Revolution (1984), with Jacqueline Rose, Feminine Sexuality:
Jacques Lacan and the ecole freudienne (1982), and with Michael Parsons, a
collection of the papers of Enid Balint, Before I was I, Psychoanalysis =
and
the imagination (1993). Psychoanalysis and Feminism will be re-issued with
a new introduction in May and her new book Madmen & Medusas: Reclaiming
Hysteria and the Sibling Relation for the Human Condition will be =
published
by Allen Lane and Penguin Books in April.
HANNA SEGAL is a member, Training Analyst and former President of the
British Psycho-Analytical Society. She has been Freud Professor of
Psychoanalysis at the University of London and Vice President of the
International Psychoanalytical Association. She has written on mental
processes, psychoanalytic technique, psychosis and psychotic mechanisms,
symbolism, aesthetics, literature and politics. Her books include
Introduction to the Work of Melanie Klein (1964) Klein (1979) The Work of
Hanna Segal (1981) Dream, Phantasy and Art (1991) and Psychoanalysis,
Literature and War (1997).
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