Call for Abstracts
Graduate Conference
Identity and Right-Wing Ideology
Freie Universität Berlin
Institute for Philosophy
14 February 2025
Confirmed keynote speakers: Nikita Dhawan (TU Dresden) and Torsten Menge
(Northwestern University in Qatar)
Right-wing movements have increased exponentially over the last decade.
They pose a threat to democratic political systems by promoting
nationalism, xenophobia, racism, and politically motivated violence.
They tend to be structured around exclusive identities involving
political myths about the existence of supra-personal entities or
groups. These identities are portrayed as something under threat that is
nonetheless worth preserving. An example is the Great Replacement
Theory, which claims that white, Christian Europeans are being
demographically and culturally replaced, usually by Muslim populations.
This theory is, of course, not supported by quantitative evidence.
However, proponents of this theory include prominent mainstream
politicians (e.g., Giorgia Meloni, Prime Minister of Italy, or Viktor
Orbán, Prime Minister of Hungary) and people in extraordinary positions
of power (e.g., businessman Elon Musk). Equally, a great proportion of
the incidents involving considerable political violence (i.e., terror
attacks such as the Christchurch Mosque shootings, or Anders Breivik’s
attacks) occurring in recent years have been motivated by fears fuelled
by this theory.
This form of identity – conceived as a set of characteristics of a
social group – involves a different, relational understanding implied
by the desire for the former to 'remain the same'. In metaphysics,
identity is conceived in two ways: qualitative (as a relation between
two entities that have the same properties) and numerical (as a relation
that an entity can only have with itself, usually conceived and examined
as it is extended temporally). These issues come up in the context of
the metaphysics of the self, as the question of personal identity over
time. This asks what a necessary and sufficient condition is for a
person at one point in time to be (numerically) identical with a person
at another point in time – or what constitutes this identity.
We invite abstracts from graduate students in philosophy and the social
sciences that explore the ways in which right-wing ideology involves
matters of identity. While interdisciplinary approaches are welcome, the
aim will be to focus on the metaphysical commitments about identity
these tend to involve. Conversely, can insights from metaphysics,
especially but not limited to the question of personal identity (e.g.,
reductionism), be used to critique right-wing concerns, such as those
involved by the great replacement theory? And on what grounds can we
distinguish legitimate concerns that involve comparable identity
relations (e.g., those informing anti-colonial struggles)? Participants
will be offered up to 20 minutes to present their papers, followed by 10
minutes for discussion. Presentations will be in English.
Bursaries will be awarded to help with travel costs (paid as an
honorarium). Priority will be given to those who cannot rely on
institutional support to cover these costs.
Submission guidelines: Please submit an abstract of up to 400 words by
12 January 2025. The abstract should be sent to
mihnea.chiujdea(a)fu-berlin.de, attached to an e-mail with the subject
“Abstract”, along with your name, affiliation, a brief biographical
note and information regarding travel fund needs. Successful applicants
will be notified by 17 January.
Organiser: Mihnea Chiujdea, Freie Universität, Berlin
Funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
and the State of Berlin, as part of the Excellence Strategy of the
Federal and State Governments, through the Berlin University Alliance.
Links:
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https://fu-berlin.academia.edu/MihneaChiujdea
--
MSc. Mag. Raphael Aybar, BA
Scientific Coordinator
Vienna Doctoral School of Philosophy
University of Vienna
Universitätsstraße 7, B0301
1010 Wien
+43-1-4277-46020
https://vd-philosophy.univie.ac.at/
vd.philosophy(a)univie.ac.at
raphael.aybar(a)univie.ac.at