Events

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Conference on Empathy and Memory Studies

Posted on January 16, 2012

23 June, 2012
Deadline for abstracts: 29 February, 2012

The concept of empathy has become central to the transdisciplinary field of memory studies with the rise of interest in witnessing and trauma. Trauma studies has raised the question of primary witnessing’s relations with the unrepresentable and the problems this poses for empathy. More recently with the growing attention to mediated memory and its travels a focus has emerged on the possibilities for empathy in postmemory (Hirsch), secondary witnessing (Apel), and prosthetic memory (Landsberg).

The event

This one-day conference will provide a much needed interdisciplinary forum for memory studies to engage explicitly with the question of empathy. To date, empathy has been pitted against sympathy or over-identification with victims of past injustice and violence. On this account, sympathy leads to the appropriation or colonisation of the identities of those remembered by those who remember them, whereas empathy preserves a sense of alterity (Silvermann).

Indeed, for LaCapra, empathy may not just be a means of respecting difference but also the way in which those who remember can be Œunsettled¹ and remembrance provoked.

However, in the theory and practice of cultural memory, what do we really mean when we speak of empathy? Rather than simply define empathy as the antithesis of sympathy, how might memory studies move beyond extant definitions of empathy to open up the field of affect, identification, memory and witnessing.

Themes for the symposium will include:

-    Aesthetics, identification and the imagination

-    Gender, empathy and witnessing

-    Specific media and the transmission of empathy

-    The historicity of empathy

-    The politics of empathy

-    Empathy and the transnational/transcultural

Structure

The day will be divided into three sessions, each including a contribution from a keynote, plus generous time for discussion and responses from the floor.

Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words to Silke Arnold-de Simine
(.(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)).

Deadline: 29 February 2012