CFP: Countering Consumerism: Religious & Secular Responses (UK) (9/30/05; 4/20/06-4/22/06)
CALL FOR PAPERS
INTERNATIONAL AND INTERDISCIPLINARY CONFERENCE
COUNTERING CONSUMERISM:
RELIGIOUS AND SECULAR RESPONSES
20 - 22 APRIL 2006
VENUE: GRADUATE CENTRE,
LONDON METROPOLITAN UNIVERSITY
An interdisciplinary conference linking the themes of 'Spirituality' and
'Consumerism' is being organised as the major culminating event of an
ESRC/AHRB Cultures of Consumption Phase Two research project on
'Alternative
Hedonism and the Theory and Politics of Consumption'. The project is being
undertaken by Professor Kate Soper and Dr. Lyn Thomas within the
Institute for
the Study of European Transformations (ISET) at London Metropolitan
University.
The conference will be of interest to academics in the following fields:
anthropology, philosophy, geography, history, religious studies, politics,
media and cultural studies, sociology of consumption and/or religion,
and/or
secularity. It should also interest NGOs, charities, political parties and
pressure groups concerned with consumption, sustainability and
environmental
issues; and religious and secular groups concerned with issues of
consumption
and self-realisation
Jackie Ashley of The Guardian, Madeleine Bunting, author of Willing
Slaves,
Colin Campbell, Professor of Sociology, York University and Professor
Ziauddin
Sardar, Editor of Futures, will speak at the conference, and we are in
discussion with a number of other invited plenary speakers. We shall also
consider suitable responses to this call as potential plenary speakers.
The idea behind the Conference is to provide a forum for discussing
'alternative hedonism' and for exploring how far resistance to
consumerism and
support for sustainable development might figure as a common ethical
outlook
and ground of intellectual and spiritual solidarity both across different
religious denominations and between atheists and religious believers.
In the context of the global divisions created by the 'war on terror'
and the
animosities in particular that it has fuelled between Christianity and
Islam,
it seems appropriate to seek for means of bridge-building. The conference
will consider how far anti-consumerism can provide such a means, and those
submitting papers are therefore invited to explore its potential to
provide a
cementing link across the secular-religious divide and within and across
diverse religious communities. We also invite papers relating to the
following themes:
· Western consumption, the puritan ethic and the growth of secular
culture:
historical and contemporary perspectives
· The motivations for, and long term implications of green and ethical
consumption
· The spiritual dimensions of current forms of resistance to the
consumerist
life-style
· Pleasure and the 'good life'
· Consumption, hedonism and sustainable development
· Consumption, the self and self-realisation
· Rethinking consumption: the role of the media and cultural representation
· Critiques of consumerism and social inequalities, local, national and
global
Abstracts on proposed 20 minute contributions should be no longer that 300
words, and should be sent, either by email, to us at
iset_at_londonmet.ac.uk with
'countconsum' in the subject field, or c/o Madeleine Kingston, ISET, London
Metropolitan University, 166-220 Holloway Rd., London N7 8DB by
September 30th
2005. We plan to publish a selection of papers from the conference.
Further details are provided in the longer document attached to this email.
--Madeleine KingstonAdministrative ManagerInstitute for the Study of European Transformations (ISET)London Metropolitan University166-220 Holloway RoadLondon N7 8DBTelephone: +44 (0)207 133 2927 ========================================================== From the Literary Calls for Papers Mailing List CFP_at_english.upenn.edu Full Information at http://cfp.english.upenn.edu or write Jennifer Higginbotham: higginbj_at_english.upenn.edu ==========================================================Received on Sun Jul 17 2005 - 16:04:52 EDT