You are on page 1of 4

Le texte franais suit le texte anglais: JOY Centre for Comparative Literature University of Toronto February 27 March 1 , 2014

th st

Keynote Address by: Dina Al-Kassim (University of British Columbia) JOY is the theme for the 24th annual conference of the Centre for Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto. We invite you to consider the idea of joy in literary, theoretical, and interdisciplinary contexts. What is joy, we would like to ask earnestly? What do literature, art, and philosophy say about joy? According to Gilles Deleuze, You feel joy when you realize a potency, when you make a force real (LAbcdaire). And yet, how can the potential of ones life be realized to the highest degree? Is the feeling of joy, or the quest for it, culturally defined, and does it entail broader implications for our understanding of the human? Is the temporality of joy a rupture in time, and does it disturb commonly accepted notions of subjectivity? We propose to consider joy as a radical concept/emotion in the contemporary world. How are we to distinguish joy from happiness in a culture of self-help manuals, international happiness indexes, and widespread mood enhancers? If unhappiness is framed as a chemical imbalance, then what are we to make of joy? Can joy be understood as acceptance, affirmation, and creation of actual material conditions rather than a transcendental escape from realities? By reflecting on emotions, we ask what the implications are of situating joy in relation to the exigencies of critical thinking. How can joy be thought of as a part of the embodied and embedded structures of the subject at the heart of the processes of knowing? Is there space for joyful processes of becoming, learning, and living? If such a space doesor didexist, what are the implications of such affirmation in relation to the process of thinking itself? In the literary context, we ask in what ways representations of joy are valued or perceived. Why is the influence of Shakespeares tragedies on popular culture and the collective consciousness (e.g. Romeo & Juliet archetypes; Hamlets inescapable quotation) deeper than that of his comedies? Why is joy a much less obvious literary focus than sombre subject matters? What can we say about the link between joy and imagination? Is humoristic literature necessarily joyful? What is the impact of joyful characters or episodes on narration and literary structure? Finally, how is joy related to social justice and politics? We would like to explore the roles of joy as a motivator or an agitator, in addition to its ability to flourish in even the most harrowing of circumstances and to the role it plays in human resilience. How can we see paths for justice or social struggles as the subjective and collective realization of potencies, made in the mode of joy?

Suggested topics for exploration include but are not limited to: Literature of joy Affirmative ethics Disruptive potentials of joy Geographies of joy, cultures, and joyful encounters Environment, non-humans and humans Secret expressions: counter-cultures of joy Legibility and histories of joy Bodily expressions of joy: performance, spontaneity, dance Musicality and the sounds of joy Disciplining joy: artificial joy, self-help literatures, medical enhancement, positive thinking Psychological and psychoanalytic conceptions of joy: desire, longing, memory, anti-Oedipus Philosophical perspectives of joy: Braidotti, Leibniz, Spinoza, Deleuze, etc. Religion, spirituality and joy Joy and pedagogy Bibliophilia, cinephilia, etc. Joyfulness in writing or reading literature Joyful characters or episodes Aesthetics of joy and its manifestations in popular culture Humour, the comic and the production of joy Speculative notions of joy, science-fiction, and (bio)technology We call upon scholars, intellectuals, and creative writers to submit proposals of no more than 250 words for a 20-minute talk, as well as a brief biographical statement of no more than 50 words, by October 4, 2013 via our website: http://conference.complit.utoronto.ca/Joy. Please contact conference.complit@utoronto.ca for any questions. conference.complit@utoronto.ca

LA JOIE Centre de littrature compare Universit de Toronto 27 fvrier 1 mars 2014


er

Invite dhonneur : Dina Al-Kassim (University of British Columbia) LA JOIE est le thme du 24 colloque annuel du Centre de littrature compare de lUniversit de Toronto. Nous vous invitons considrer le thme de la joie dans les contextes littraires, thoriques et interdisciplinaires.
e

Quest-ce que la joie? Que peuvent nous apprendre la littrature, lart et la philosophie sur la joie? Gilles Deleuze affirme que la joie est la ralisation dune puissance. La question qui se pose alors est : comment le potentiel de vie dune personne peut-il se raliser au degr dintensit le plus lev? Lmotion de joie, ou sa qute, est-elle dfinie culturellement ou implique-t-elle un questionnement plus large sur notre comprhension de lhumain? Est-ce que la temporalit de la joie est une rupture dans le temps et perturbe-t-elle les conceptions tablies de la subjectivit? Nous proposons de considrer la joie comme un concept ou une motion radicale dans le monde contemporain. Comment distinguer la joie du bonheur dans une culture o les livres de croissance personnelle, les pratiques du mieux-tre et les indices nationaux de bonheur ont une place si importante? Si le mal dtre est prsent comme un dsquilibre chimique, quen est-il de la joie? La joie peut-elle tre comprise comme une acceptation, une affirmation ou une cration des conditions matrielles prsentes plutt quune fuite transcendantale de la ralit? En rflchissant sur les motions, nous nous interrogeons sur les relations entre la joie et les exigences de la pense critique. Comment la joie peut-elle tre pense comme un aspect des structures encorpores et situes des sujets qui participent au processus de rflexion? Y a-t-il une place pour les processus joyeux de devenir, dapprentissage et pour les modes de vie joyeux? Si un tel espace existe ou sil a exist par le pass , quelles sont les implications dune telle affirmation en rapport avec les processus mmes de la pense? Dans le contexte littraire, quelles sont les modalits selon lesquelles la joie est perue ou value? Pourquoi linfluence des tragdies de Shakespeare est-elle enracine dans la culture populaire et la conscience collective (par exemple les archtypes de Romo et Juliette ou linluctable citation de Hamlet), alors que limpact de ses comdies reste beaucoup plus marginal? Pourquoi les analyses littraires sintressent-elles beaucoup moins aux thmes de la joie quaux sujets plus sombres? Que peut-on dire du lien entre la joie et limagination? La littrature humoristique est-elle ncessairement joyeuse? Quels sont les impacts des personnages ou pisodes joyeux dans la structure dune uvre?

Finalement, la joie est-elle lie la justice sociale et la politique? Nous souhaitons explorer les multiples facettes de la joie comme moteur ou catalyseur, en plus de sa capacit se dvelopper dans les circonstances les plus difficiles et de son rle dans la rsilience. Comment les chemins menant la justice et aux luttes sociales peuvent-ils tre perus comme la ralisation dune puissance, porte par la joie? Sans y tre limits, les sujets explorer incluent les thmes suivants: - Littrature de la joie - thique de laffirmation - Potentiel perturbateur de la joie - Gographies de la joie, cultures et rencontres joyeuses - Environnement, non-humains et humains - Expressions secrtes: contrecultures de la joie - Lisibilit et histoires de la joie - Expressions corporelles de joie: performance, spontanit, danse - Musicalit et sons de la joie - Discipliner la joie: joie artificielle, littrature de croissance personnelle, humeur et mdication, pense positive - Conceptions psychologiques et psychanalytiques: dsir, envie, mmoire, anti-dipe - Perspectives philosophiques: Braidotti, Leibniz, Spinoza, Deleuze, etc. - Religion, spiritualit et joie - Joie et pdagogie - Bibliophilie, cinphilie, etc. - Joie dans lcriture ou la lecture - pisodes ou personnages joyeux - Esthtique de la joie et manifestations dans la culture populaire - Humour, comique et production de la joie - Notions spculatives de la joie, science-fiction et (bio)technologie Nous vous invitons soumettre vos propositions dun maximum de 250 mots pour une prsentation de 20 minutes, ainsi quune brve biographie dun maximum de 50 mots, pour le 4 octobre 2013 sur notre site internet: http://conference.complit.utoronto.ca/Joy. Contacter conference.complit@utoronto.ca pour toute question.

You might also like