Body Politics: Graduate Student Conference | Dept. of Anthropology

Date: 

Fri - Sat, Apr 21 to Apr 22, 10:00am - 4:00pm

Location: 

Tozzer Anthropology Building

 

Body Politics: Harvard Anthropology Graduate Student Conference

April 21-22, 2023 in Tozzer Atrium & Room 203, Harvard University (21 Divinity Avenue)

Visit our website for a live schedule / register to attend remotely on zoom here.

This conference is open to in-person attendance (no registration required) as well as remote attendance on zoom (registration required). Panelists will be presenting in person.

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Bodies matter. They take form and flesh forth in ways that are consequential to the formation of the social, the economic, and the political. Highly indebted to feminist, queer, and antiracist traditions, scholars across disciplines in the social sciences and humanities have called attention to the significance of bodies and modes of embodiment to the workings of power. Social worlds centre around particular bodies—some bodies are desired, while others are stigmatized. Bodies determine the boundaries of inclusion and exclusion, and they regulate the normative modes of interpersonal conduct that govern everyday life. Similarly, the subtle acts of governance deployed by various political regimes remain anchored to disciplinary techniques that principally act on and through bodies. For much of the past century—and up to the present moment—democratic forms of governance have predominantly characterized the framework of political authority underpinning various disciplinary modalities regulating bodies. Yet, despite the various liberal and illiberal political claims made on them, bodies remain difficult to delimit. They are porous, unbounded, and entangled with other bodies and objects. They feel, collect, ingest and release things. They simultaneously define and defy the limits of individuality and personal autonomy. Indeed, bodies are malleable in ways that make them difficult to pin down, and they produce differential relations that often supersede the totalizing claims of disciplinary power. This conference, thus, calls upon graduate students to re-examine the analytical, political, and ethical dimensions of body-politics. How might we reconceptualize the social, cultural, economic, and political lives of bodies today

 

Day 1 (April 21):

 

10am – 11.30am

Opening keynote: Aimee Cox, New York University

 

11.45am – 1:15pm

Session 1: Affect and the Senses

Discussant: Julia Fierman, Harvard Anthropology

Panelists: Zaith Lopez (Stanford U.) ; Timothy Loh (MIT); Akhil Kang (Cornell U.); Mir Fatimah Kanth (UCSD)

 

2.15pm – 3.45pm

Session 2: Gender and Sexuality

Discussant: Sarah Luna, Tufts University

Panelists: Clara Beccaro (New School); Thelma Wang (MIT); Jessica Dailey (Notre Dame U.); Simona Spiegel (Notre Dame U.)

 

4:00 pm – 5:30 pm

Session 3: Citizenship

Discussant: Malavika Reddy, Harvard Anthropology

Panelists: Alex Shams (U. Chicago); Javid Riahi (Harvard U.); Feifan Li (Harvard U.); Shanni Zhao (Harvard U.)

 

Day 2 (April 22):

 

10am – 11.30am

Session 4: Class and Labour

Discussant: Elizabeth Ferry, Brandeis University

Panelists: Sean Muller (New School); Sanghamitra Das (Arizona State U.); Neymat Chadha (IIT, Delhi); Elif Irem Az (Columbia U.)

 

11.45am – 1.15pm

Session 5: Ecology

Discussant: Ajantha Subramanian, Harvard Anthropology

Panelists: Ipsita Dey (Princeton U.); Diana Guo (Harvard GSD); Calvin Edward (CUNY); Alejandra Osejo-Varona (Rice U.)

 

2.30pm – 4.00pm

Closing keynote: Alex Blanchette, Tufts University

 

*For any questions please write us: pol.anth.harvard@gmail.com*