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Seminar on Glas, Session II: On Hegel's Fetishization of Africa

Antigone's Worldings graphic, with title of event and headshots of the two speakers
Friday, October 22, 2021
12:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Tina Chanter; Caroline Rooney
Antigone's Worldings

Please register here: https://duke.is/rcn9y

A new translation of Jacques Derrida's Glas has given us the opportunity to revisit this groundbreaking experimental text. In Glas, Derrida juxtaposes readings of Hegel and Jean Genet in pursuit of a form of difference that resists dialectical synthesis, while helping us to understand the kind of work that is mourning, and the kind of mourning that is perhaps involved in any kind of work. Led by a set of interdisciplinary feminist theorists (Ranjana Khanna, Miriam Leonard, Tina Chanter, Caroline Rooney, MD Murtagh and Andrés Fabián Henao Castro), we will focus on how to understand the challenge that the presence of the corpse represents for the living (Session 1), expand on Derrida's analysis of Hegel's fetichizing of Africa (Session 2), and rethink sexual difference through Derrida's reading of Genet's literature (Session 3).

Readings:

For the seminar on Glas, you can use either the old Nebraska translation, if you have it already, or get the new translation from Minnesota Press, titled, Clang, which is also more affordable. Primary sections for this seminar session are listed below:

Nebraska Edition (Glas). Both columns of pages 189-211
Minnesota Edition (Clang). Both columns of pages 212-236

A limited number of copies of Glas (Clang) are available to Duke University students, faculty, visiting scholars, and staff. Please fill out this survey if you plan to attend the event and would like a copy of the text:
https://duke.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_0wutPTOc7xee7Rk

For the full symposium schedule, visit https://fhi.duke.edu/antigonesworldings

Contact: Sarah Rogers