Stefan Gandler Colloquium

Stefan Gandler, “Towards a Non-Eurocentric Critical Theory”

Author of Fragmentos de Frankfurt (Siglo XXI, 2009), Materialismus und Messianismus (Aisthesis, Bielefeld, 2008) and Marxismo crítico en México: (FCE, 2007), Stefan Gandler works on the possibility of overcoming the Eurocentric limitations of the Frankfurt School, confronting its Critical Theory of Society with contemporary socio-theoretical debate in Latin America.

Stefan Gandle, Faculty in Ciencias Políticas y Sociales, Universidad Autónoma de Querétaro; Filosofía y Letras, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.

Nathaniel Deutsch: “The Right to Remain: Jewish Geographies in Imperial Russia”

Unlike others who became part of the Russian Empire as a result of the partitions of Poland, Jews were not viewed as native to the newly colonized territories. Many accepted their doubly alien status; however, there also emerged Jewish views that rejected the assumption that they were necessarily alien. Professor Deutsch discusses the significance of these views against the backdrop of internal Jewish politics and Russian policies.

Nathaniel Deutsch is Professor of Literature, History, and Jewish Studies at UC Santa Cruz.

Sylvia Chan-Malik: “A Part of Islam: Recovering Race and Gender in Muslim America”

Professor Chan-Malik’s research explores the racialization of Islam in the U.S. She examines how national legacies of anti-blackness and late-20th century Black freedom struggles, alongside neoliberal logics of race, gender, class, sexuality, and “multicultural democracy,” have informed constructions of Islamic Terror and Muslim American cultural politics since the 1970s.

Sylvia Chan-Malik is the UC President’s Postdoctoral Fellow in American Studies at UC Santa Cruz.

Deborah Gould: “Moving Politics: Emotion and ACT UP’s Fight Against AIDS”

Professor Gould discusses political emotion, especially affective stimuli and blockages to political activism. She is interested in political imaginaries and their conditions of possibility; the psychic effects of oppression; social movements as sites of collective world-making; solidarity and its fracturing; political desire; and political despair.

Deborah Gould is Assistant Professor of Sociology at UC Santa Cruz.

S. Lochlann Jain: “The Mortality Effect”

Professor Jain discusses her analysis of the politics, history, and culture of cancer treatment in the U.S. She is the author of Injury: The Politics of Product Design and Safety Law in the United States (Princeton, 2006) and a book-in-progress, Commodity Violence: The Politics of Automobility (Duke).

S. Lochlann Jain is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Stanford University.

Noah Wardrip-Fruin: “Expressive Processing”

Noah Wardrip-Fruin is author of Expressive Processing: Digital Fictions, Computer Games, and Software Studies (MIT, 2009), and has edited four books, including Second Person: Role-Playing and Story in Games and Playable Media with Pat Harrigan (MIT, 2007), and The New Media Reader with Nick Montfort (MIT, 2003). He is an Assistant Professor with the Expressive Intelligence Studio in the Department of Computer Science at UCSC.

Expressive Processing is the first volume in the new Software Studies series from MIT Press. Professor Wardrip-Fruin works to develop a software studies approach for digital media by interpreting the computational processes at work in digital fictions and games in a humanities mode. He looks at works experienced by audiences not just as media in the traditional sense, but also as the output of computational processes.

Matthew Wolf-Meyer: “Nonstop”

Matthew Wolf-Meyer is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology, having joined UCSC in 2009. He received his Ph.D. from the Department of Anthropology at the University of Minnesota, specializing in medical anthropology and the social study of science and technology. He is currently working on a book, The Slumbering Masses: Integral Medicine and the Production of American Everyday Life, which focuses on sleep in American culture and its historical and contemporary relations to capitalism.

American sleep science has long participated in fantasies of sleep’s eradication. This paper examines how this desire for sleep science’s apotheosis depends on science-fictional conceptions of human biology and society’s reordering. American medicine deploys sleep as a site for intervention, remaking everyday human physiology in accordance with the rhythms of American capitalism and consumer demands.

Soraya Murray: “Analytic Borderlands: Visualizations of Globality and the Body Becoming”

Soraya Murray holds a Ph.D. from Cornell University in Art History and teaches at UCSC. She has published on contemporary art, technology, and globalization in Art Journal, Nka: Journal of Contemporary African Art, and PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art. Professor Murray is completing a manuscript on bodies under the duress of advanced technologies and globalization and their visual representation in contemporary art and media culture.

This presentation investigates bodies under the duress of globalization and their representation in visual culture. Moving from Linda Nochlin’s consideration of the body in pieces as a metaphor for early modernity, it examines Homi Bhabha’s “becoming” and Saskia Sassen’s “analytic borderlands” as frameworks for understanding depictions of bodies—particularly women’s bodies—in the matrix of global flux.

Miriam Greenberg: “Progressive Branding? An Examination of Marketing on (and of) the Left”

Miriam Greenberg is Assistant Professor of Sociology at UCSC, with emphases in urban sociology, media studies, and social theory. Her book Branding New York: How a City in Crisis was Sold to the World (Routledge, 2008) won the Robert Park Award for the best book in Urban Sociology in 2008-09. She is developing a collaborative project, Crisis Cities, comparing the marketing of recovery in New York post-9/11 and post-Katrina New Orleans.

Professor Greenberg focuses on the social-spatial dynamics of crisis, with particular interest in the political economy and media framing of “crisis” and “recovery” in cities over the last forty years. Her talk examines the recent turn in left circles, particularly since Obama’s victory, to “progressive branding.” She traces the emergence of this concept and points to some of its potential complications and contradictions.

Robin Archer: “American Exceptionalism and Labor Politics”

Robin Archer is Director of the Graduate Program in Political Sociology at the London School of Economics. He was previously Fellow in Politics at Corpus Christi College at Oxford. His publications include the co-edited Out of Apathy: Voices of the New Left 30 Years On (Verso, 1989); Economic Democracy (Oxford, 1995); and the recent Why Is There No Labor Party in the United States? (Princeton, 2008).

Why is there no labor party in the United States? Elsewhere these parties were established in the late 19th or early 20th century, and, ever since, this question has been at the heart of a major debate about the “exceptional” nature of American politics and society. Drawing on his recently published work, Professor Archer will show how a new comparative approach suggests some unexpected answers.