Lecture Series - Professor William E. Connolly

Lecture Series - Professor William E. Connolly
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This is a past event

This lecture series will run from 8 - 11 May and is hosted by the Centre for Citizenship, Civil Society & the Rule of Law (CISRUL)

The lectures will take place as follows:

 

Mon, 8 May

Tues, 9 May

Wed, 10 May

Thurs, 11 May

1-3pm

1-3pm

6-8pm

1-3 pm

New Kings 14

New Kings 14

New Kings 10

Taylor C 11

Sophocles, Spirituality and the Planetary

Seminar: Facing the Planetary: Entangled Humanism and the Politics of Swarming

PUBLIC LECTURE:

Postcolonial Ecologies, Extinction Events, and Entangled Humanism

Steps Toward a Genealogy of Fascism

In a poll of American political theorists published in Political Science in 2010, William E. Connolly was ranked the fourth most influential political theorist over the last twenty years, after Rawls, Habermas and Foucault.

Prof. Connolly has taught as a visiting professor at numerous schools including The University of Exeter, European University Institute, Oxford University, and Boston College. He has been a Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study and the Stanford Center for Behavioral Studies. His book The Terms of Political Discourse won the Benjamin Evans Lippincott Award in 1999 and remains widely held to be a major work of political theory. He is co-moderator of the Blog ‘The Contemporary Condition’, where he also posts regularly.

Prof. Connolly’s work focuses on the issues of pluralism, capitalism, inequality and imbrications between nonhuman, self-organizing forces and contemporary life. His books include Why I Am Not A Secularist (1999); Pluralism (2005); A World of Becoming (2011); The Fragility of Things: Self-Organizing Systems, Neoliberal Fantasies and Democratic Activism; and Facing the Planetary: Entangled Humanism and the Politics of Swarming (2017). His current work focuses on how to rethink freedom, belonging and activism during the era of rapid climate warming.

* For more information about this event, please contact: Prof. Chris Brittain, c.brittain@abdn.ac.uk  01224 272 374