rezumate

September 24th, 2008

Iata cateva din rezumatele conferintei.Toate rezumatele le puteti downloada de aici: rezumate.

 

Sorin Alexandrescu
Modernists and Antimodernists: Enemies or Friends?

I. Three older assumptions about modernism and modernity – their similarity, their homogeneity and the affinity of modernism with (only) liberal and left wing politics -have come recently under heavy attack. Instead, different books revealed the last years that (aesthetic and social) modernism rather opposed (capitalist and materialist) modernity, that modernism has been akin also to right wing politics (Roger Griffin) and that it showed inner division between “strict” and “alternative” modernists, the last ones having adopted a rather critical stance on some common principles (Les Antimodernes, by Antoine Compagnon).
In spite of their differences, all these opinions do no longer discuss modernism only in terms of artistic achievements but also in terms of its political, social and general cultural substructures. I completely agree with this and so does a whole research group related to the Center of Excellence in Image Studies (CESI) that spent the last three years studying the social and cultural aspects of the Romanian inter-war Modernism.
In the following, I shall restrict my remarks to the book of Roger Griffin, Modernism and Fascism – a real turning point in Modernism studies – because we can find in it all the above-mentioned points of view.
II. The book is very convincing in taking into account the existence of a rightist inter-war modernism, supported by the Nazi and Fascist regimes of Germany and Italy, next to the earlier accepted left wing modernism of Russian constructivists and different Marxist groups in Western Europe. Nevertheless, some theoretical aspects demand further discussion. While both tendencies promote modernism, it is obvious that they do it in quite different ways: they contradict not only one another, but also the modernism in non-totalitarian countries. This complex situation was possible only because a kind of general system of values assigned at that time in Europe different political and cultural positions to each variant. Our task should be then to sketch such a system of (weberian) “ideal types”, as Roger Griffin rightly says.
Further, opposition was not the only relation between modernism and modernity: while many novels and paintings expressed in an allegorical way (see Adorno, Marcuse) some contemporary crises, they did not assert the decadence of the Western society and the necessity to embark on a quest for transcendental values, a generalization Roger Griffin pleads for.

Sorin Antohi
Modernism, Antimodernism, and the Transfiguration of the National: Ethnic Ontologies in Interwar Europe

Starting under the auspices of the palingenetic Romanticism of the European generation of 1848, modern discussions about national specificity or national essence have remained for half a century in the spheres of esthetics, symbolic geography, and national characterology. Under the impact of modernism (and of its negative double, equally obsessed with the future: antimodernism), these definitions of ethnicity undergo a radical turn after World War One, against the background of the rise of Western fascisms (a darker wave of palingeneticism) and of their Eastern counterparts. Simply put, in the span of a generation, Europe goes all the way from (usually metaphysical) esthetics to (usually racist) biopolitics.
Thus, national characterology becomes a collection of variations on the theme of ethnic stigma or on the related theme of national (later, racial, superiority); symbolic geography emphasizes both every ethnic nation’s isolationism and its geocultural and geopolitical ambitions, up to (micro)imperialist visions and projects; finally, ethno-national esthetics (a paradigm whose metaphysical and mystical accents were already present in its Romantic formula) is inserted into a more ambitious project, not devoid of the elements of a political religion: ethnic ontology.
Consequently, Europe’s ethnic nations are endowed with complete worldviews: time (not just history), space (not just territory), Being (not just national character) are understood as ontological (pseudo)categories. And when ethnic ontology itself goes through a crisis and proves to be insufficient for the ‘transfiguration’ of the country (from ethnie to society to the state understood as a total and messianic intitution-community), modernist science enters the stage and generates a biopolitics.
The paper outlines this phenomenon and provides a number of illustrations from several European national cultures.

Roger Griffin
(Western) Modernity + Anti-(existing)Modernity=’Modernism’ (?)

This keynote proposes that hosting a major international and interdisciplinary conference in Bucharest in 2008 is timely because the socio-political and intellectual emancipation of national cultures in post-Soviet Eastern Europe (keen to make sense of their unique modern histories without authoritarian blinkers) has coincided with a number of major advances in our understanding of particular aspects the modern age. This can be illustrated in an Anglophone context by growing sophistication in analysing the dynamics of ideology (e.g. Michael Freeden); Nazism (Ian Kershaw, Michael Burleigh) the Holocaust (Christopher Browning, Zygmunt Bauman); Fascism (Emilio Gentile); political religion (Hans Maier) and its relationship to totalitarianism (Emilio Gentile, Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions, Compass: Political Religion), generic fascism (Stanley Payne, myself); communism (Bernice Rosenthal); the temporalities of modernity (Peter Osborne, Peter Schleifer), post-secularization, re-enchantment and post-secularity (John Gray, Michael Burleigh, Charles Taylor); the scientization of eugenics and biopolitics (Paul Weindling, Marius Turda).
The transdisciplinary ethos created by such developments and openness to the convergence of paradigms and clustering of concepts it promotes, especially among younger scholars, has fostered a greater recognition of the way so many apparently unrelated modern phenomena share a common palingenetic drive towards a new artistic, social, political or historical order (nomos) in order to restore a sense of transcendence and overcome decadence. Examples of this new wave of scholarship are the works of Tod Presner on Zionism, Adam Tooze on the Nazi economy, and Bernice Rosenthal on Stalinism, as well as recent exhibitions on modernism held at the Victoria and Albert Museum and the British Library . It is in this context that the deficiencies of the old paradigm of ‘modern; and ‘anti-modern’/’progressive’/’reactionary’ have been exposed. This has liberated the concept ‘modernism’ from its aesthetic-cultural ghetto so that it can now acquire unprecedented heuristic value as a generic term for human bids in every area of human endeavour to counteract and neutralize the disembedding, nihilistic thrust of modernity and inaugurate a new futurity, a new reality, a new nomos. It can now evoke a striving towards transcendence and the erection of a new ‘sacred canopy’, whether at the level of almost hermetic aesthetic understanding or of a major experiment in engineering a new society undertaken by a self-proclaimed new order.
In different ways both the Romanian Iron Guard and Islamism illustrate the potential of the subsuming anti-modernity under the concept modernism within the new dispensation of the human sciences and the international academic community embodied at this conference. The key question then becomes, in Kantian terms, whether the new paradigm is emerging within a modernity which will prove to have been humankind’s protracted palingenesis (and hence a doomed attempted at self-renewal after the erosion and destruction of traditional societies and their nomoi), or the harbinger of an eventual metamorphosis which combines the awesome scientific and technocratic power of modernity with the sustainability of most traditional societies. If so it would be a synthesis which is only speciously Hegelian, and marking the temporary salvation of human history after self-inflicted ecological and economic catastrophes, not its ‘end’.

s-a incheiat conferinta

September 22nd, 2008

Conferinta internationala “Modernism si antimodernism. Teorii, viziuni, ideologii, politica”, gazduita de revista Cuvantul, organizata de Muzeul National al Literaturii Romane si Fundatia Amfiteatru in parteneriat cu Orbis Tertius. Institut de Studii Interculturale, Oxford Brookes Universiy, CESI. Centrul de Excelenta in Studiul Imaginii si editura Palgrave Macmillan, si sponsorizata de Posta Romana, s-a desfasurat in zilele de 19-21 septembrie 2008 in Sala “Tinerimea Romana” din Bucuresti.

In deschiderea conferintei, au luat cuvantul directorul Muzeului National al Literaturii Romane, domnul Radu Calin Cristea, si Secretarul General al Ministerului Culturii si Cultelor, Virgil Stefan Nitulescu. Amandoi au subliniat importanta organizarii unui eveniment de o asemenea amploare si substanta la Bucuresti.

In seara de 19 septembrie, participantii au fost primiti la Palatul Elisabeta de Altetele lor Regale Margareta, Principesa Mostenitoare a Romaniei, si Radu, Principe al Romaniei.  Intr-o ceremonie speciala, unul dintre vorbitorii din cadrul conferintei, profesorul Keith Hitchins, a primit Crucea Casei Regale a Romaniei.

La conferinta au fost prezentate public douazeci de comunicari, sustinute de specialisti din Romania, Anglia, Cipru, Franta, Germania, Grecia, Statele Unite, Ungaria. Hayden White, care nu a putut veni la conferinta din motive de sanatate, si-a trimis lucrarea pentru a fi distribuita participantilor. Textul lui Hayden White va fi inclus in volumul colectiv bazat pe acest eveniment, care va avea o versiune in limba engleza si una in limba romana.

In seara de 20 septembrie, Harry Tavitian a oferit un concert participantilor, echipei de organizare si altor invitati.

Cu ocazia conferintei, a fost lansat numarul pe august-septembrie 2008 al revistei Cuvantul, care deschide o noua serie, sub directia lui Sorin Antohi si cu un nou colectiv redactional. Avest numar este dedicat aceleiasi teme si este insotit de primul volum din colectia “Addenda Cuvantul”.  Acest model (conferinta, numar tematic, volum asociat, volume ulterioare) va fi folosit si cu alte prilejuri.

Programul conferintei

September 15th, 2008

Programul final, al conferintei. Nu uitati, pentru inscrieri va rog scrieti la redactie@cuvantul.ro.

Friday, September 19

15:00-16:00 Welcoming Remarks
Chair: Sorin Antohi
Remarks by:
Virgil Nitulescu, State Secretary

Radu Calin Cristea, Director of the National Museum of Romanian Literature

16:00-16:15 Break

16:15-17:00 Panel One: Keynote Address
Chair: Sorin Antohi
Roger Griffin: (Western) Modernity + Anti-(existing)Modernity=’Modernism’ (?)

17:10-17:30 Break

17:30-19:00 Panel Two
Chair: Jörn Rüsen
Keith Hitchins: The Challenge of Modernism: The Orthodox Response in Interwar Southeastern Europe
Sorin Antohi: Modernism, Antimodernism, and the Transfiguration of the National: Ethnic Ontologies in Interwar Europe
Balázs Trencsényi: Radical Discourses of Identity in Interwar East Central Europe: Political Romanticism, Konservative Revolution, and Anti-Modernism

19:30 Formal Ceremony and Cocktail at Palace Elisabeta, the Official Residence of the Royal House of  Romania, hosted by Her Royal Highness, Princess Margareta of Romania, and His Royal Highness, Prince Radu of Romania. By special invitation only.

Saturday, September 20

9:00-10:30 Panel Three
Chair: Keith Hitchins
Peter Fritzsche: The Conceit of Modernity
Marius Turda: Modernism and Visions of National Perfection
Attila Melegh: Modernism and Antimodernism as a False Dichotomy in the Context of the Global Hierarchies of the 20th Century

10:30-11:00 Break

11:00-12:30 Panel Four
Chair: Balázs Trencsényi
Maria Stavrinaki: War, Modernism, and Apocalypse: The Ambivalences of the Sacral
Victor Rizescu: Developmental Ideology or Regenerative Nationalism? Competing Strands of the Romanian Right Before World War Two
Constantin Iordachi: Totalitarianism as Alternative Modernization: Fascism and Communism in Comparison

12:30-16:00 Break

16:00-17:30 Panel Five
Chair: Erwin Kessler
Stephen Bury: Exhibiting the Avant-Garde
Mark Antliff: Vorticism, Violence, and Modernity: The Life and Art of Henri Gaudier-Brzeska
Patricia Leighten: Abstracting Anarchism: Elisée Reclus, Frantisek Kupka, and the Project of Modernist Art

17:30-18:00 Break

18:00-19:30 Panel Six
Chair: Sorin Alexandrescu
Augustin Ioan: Built Romanianness: The Century-Old Obsession with ‘National Identity’
Erwin Kessler: On De-modernization
Caius Dobrescu and Sorin Adam Matei: Latent Crusaders. Cosmic Conflict and the Modernization of the Romanian Intellectual Class

20:00 Concert: Harry Tavitian

Sunday, September 21

9:00-10:30 Panel Seven
Chair: Lazar Vlasceanu
R?zvan Pârâianu: Romanian National Culture as an Antimodernist Project
Paul Cernat: Modern and Antimodern in the Interwar Romanian Novel
Sorin Alexandrescu: Modernists and Antimodernists: Enemies or Friends?

10:30-11:00 Break

11:00-12:30 Panel Eight
Chair: Marius Turda
Anastasia Nikolopoulou: Melodrama’s Modern Illnesses and Cures: From Coleridge to Peter Brooks, 1816-1975
Claude Karnoouh: Tradition and Modernity: Notes on an Old Debate
Mihai Spariosu: Utopia, Exile, and Ludic Liminality in Modernism and Postmodernism

12:30-12:45 Break

12:45-13:30 Concluding Remarks
Chairs: Roger Griffin, Sorin Antohi

participanti

September 15th, 2008

Iata si lista finala cu participantii la aceasta conferinta:

Sorin Alexandrescu (Professor Emeritus, University of Amsterdam, Professor, University of Bucharest/ Director of CESI, Bucharest)
Mark Antliff (Professor, Department of Art, Art History & Visual Studies, Duke University)
Sorin Antohi (Director of Cuvântul and of Orbis Tertius. Institute of Intercultural Studies, Bucharest)
Stephen Bury (Head of European and American Collections, The British Library, London)
Paul Cernat (Associate Professor of Romanian Literature, University of Bucharest)
Sorin Adam Matei (Department of Communication, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana)
Peter Fritzsche (Professor, History, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign)
Roger Griffin (Professor in Modern History, Oxford Brookes University)
Keith Hitchins (Professor of History, University of Illinois)
Augustin Ioan (Professor, University of Architecture and Planning, Bucharest)
Claude Karnoouh (Senior Fellow Emeritus, CNRS, Paris)
Erwin Kessler (Research Fellow, Institute of Philosophy, Bucharest)
Patricia Leighten (Professor, Department of Art, Art History & Visual Studies, Duke University)
Attila Melegh (Senior Lecturer, Demographic Research Institute, Budapest)
Anastasia Nikolopoulou (Associate Professor of English Studies, University of Cyprus)
Razvan Pârâianu (Associate Professor of History, Petru Maior Univesity, Targu-Mure?)
Victor Rizescu (Associate Professor, Faculty of Political Science, University of Bucharest)
Jörn Rüsen (Senior Fellow, Kulturwissenschaftliches Institut, Essen)
Mihai Spariosu (Distinguished Research Professor, Comparative Literature, University of Georgia, Athens)
Maria Stavrinaki (Associate Professor of Art History, Université de Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne, Paris)
Balázs Trencsényi (Associate Professor, History Department, CEU, Budapest)
Marius Turda (RCUK Academic Fellow in Biomedicine, Oxford Brookes University)
Lazar Vlasceanu (Professor of Sociology, University of Bucharest)

Inscrieri

September 11th, 2008

Au inceput inscrierile pentru confeinta internationala “Modernism si antimodernism” . Intrarea este libera in limita capacitatii salii. Daca doriti sa participati la conferinta o puteti face trimitand un mail la adresa redactie@cuvantul.ro.

Conferinta Internationala

September 11th, 2008

Tema centrala a istoriei moderne si contemporane a Europei este dialectica modernism-antimodernism. Din aceasta dialectica s-au nascut deopotriva avangardele estetice si ideologiile radicale-totalitare, stiintele moderne si toate celelalte viziuni despre lume ale omului epocii noastre. Nu putem intra cu adevarat intr-o epoca noua – mai ales daca nu credem ca sfirsitul istoriei a avut deja loc – fara a o intelege pe cea veche.

Romania, in special capitala sa, constituie un caz exemplar al acestui fenomen european. De aici au plecat in Occident, aici s-au primit din Occident si transformat idei si oameni, ideologii si curente, programe politice si formule de societate. Nume ca Tristan Tzara si Victor Brauner, ca Mircea Eliade si Emil Cioran, ca Eugen Ionesco si Brancusi fac parte din patrimoniul universal. Conferinta va pune pe aceasta harta si alte nume, idei, actiuni si opere romanesti, mai putin cunoscute de straini.

Conferinta, initiata de Sorin Antohi, Roger Griffin si Marius Turda, carora li s-a alaturat pe parcurs Sorin Alexandrescu, va aduce la Bucuresti elita cercetarii asupra domeniului. Pentru a da numai citeva exemple: Joern Ruesen (n. 1938) este unul dintre cei mai ilustri savanti din stiintele umaniste; Roger Griffin (n. 1948) este creatorul unei teorii extrem de originale asupra legaturii dintre modernism si fascism. Specialistii romani din tara, ca Sorin Alexandrescu – un pionier al explorarii temei –, Augustin Ioan, Caius Dobrescu si Erwin Kessler, precum si romani stabiliti in strainatate, ca Mihai Spariosu, Marius Turda, Constantin Iordachi, se adauga colegilor straini.

Versiunea in limba engleza a volumului colectiv bazat pe conferinta va aparea la editura Palgrave Macmillan. Va exista si o versiune romaneasca a cartii, precum si alte produse editoriale si publicistice asociate, intre care primul numar din noua serie a revistei Cuvantul si primul volum din seria ADDENDA Cuvantul, coordonat de Sorin Antohi, Modernism si antimodernism. Noi perspective interdisciplinare. In spatiul public si academic romanesc, e vorba de o premiera. Prin publicatii si expunere mediatica, in preajma conferintei si in prelungirea ei, se va facilita accesul marelui public educat la intregul program.

Data: 19-21 septembrie

Locatie: Centrul Tinerimea Romana (str. Str. Johann Gutenberg 19)

Organizatori:

Muzeul National al Literaturii Romane

Fundatia Amfiteatru

Parteneri:

Oxford Brookes University

Orbis Tertius. Institute of Intercultural Studies

CESI. Center for Excellence in the Study of the Image

Palgrave MacMillan