28 febbraio > 2 marzo 2014
Madrid
The new abduction of Europe / Il nuovo ratto d’Europa
Debt, war & democratic revolutions /Debito, guerra & rivoluzioni democratiche
Il Teatro Valle Occupato, insieme a Macao e altre realtà italiane attive sul piano della produzione culturale e/o della pratica politica, sarà a Madrid per partecipare al meeting internazionale The new abduction of Europe organizzato da L’internationale, network di musei e istituzioni culturali europee, e Fundación de los Comunes.
L’evento si svolgerà in 3 tavole rotonde di discussione tra attivisti, operatori e teorici con una metodologia orizzontale per favorire lo scambio tra i partecipanti. Sarà possibile seguire in streaming. L’obbiettivo è stimolare un processo di auto-organizzazione e di azione collettiva a livello europeo all’interno del mondo dell’accademia e della produzione culturale.
Una parte importante dell’attività delle giornate, saranno i 5 gruppi di lavoro dedicati a questioni chiave dell’attuale situazione europea: debito, democrazia, tecnopolitica, commonfare e produzione culturale. Lo scopo è quello di iniziare a costruire un lessico comune che possa essere utilizzato per creare un nuovo spazio politico europeo.
18:30 – 19:00 Presentation
Jesús Carrillo, MNCARS
19:00 – 20:00 Opening dialogue
Antonio Negri, Zdenka Badovinac, Manuel Borja-Villel and Raúl Sánchez Cedillo
The austerity policies put in place by European governments through the Troika have turned a financial crisis into a project bent on the destruction of social and workers’ rights, and they have established a regime of infinite debt on individuals and institutions. But new political and institutional creations are demonstrating that debt and democracy based on citizen participation and on social rights are incompatible. In these creations we get a glimpse of prototypes of a Europe made from the bottom up, out of the sense of brotherhood of the social struggles and self-organisation by citizens.
Friday 28th February
18:30-19:30 Roundtable 1: Organization in a Time of Crisis
Discussion between Antonio Negri, Valery Alzaga and Ada Colau. Moderator: Raúl Sánchez Cedillo.
The austerity policies put in place by European governments through the Troika have turned a financial crisis into a project bent on the destruction of social and workers’ rights, and they have established a regime of infinite debt on individuals and institutions. But new political and institutional creations are demonstrating that debt and democracy based on citizen participation and on social rights are incompatible. In these creations we get a glimpse of prototypes of a Europe made from the bottom up, out of the sense of brotherhood of the social struggles and self-organisation by citizens.
19:30 – 20:30 Roundtable 2: New Democracies and Paths towards the Commons
Discussion between Isabell Lorey, Montserrat Galcerán and Marina Garcés. Moderator: Someone from FdlC (tbc).
The ideal of social and political citizenship in Europe has never been more than a distant aspiration, constantly belied by the facts. While in effect, it was dominated by a white, male, industrial, national and state-oriented figure. And with the hegemony of the neoliberal paradigm, even the collective reference associated with the working class and union movements has disappeared. The “government of the precarious” is imbued with individualism and the abandonment of collective solidarities. However, the practices of the commons, both those linked to the “natural commons” (water, land, renewable energies) and those linked to the “artificial commons” (knowledge, care-giving, networks) enable us to imagine a Europe united by new institutions of the commons, born out of cooperation and care-giving between precarious lives that have taken the form of a challenge.
Saturday 1st March
18:30 -19:30 Roundtable 3: Europe as a Province
Discussion between Ranabir Samaddar, Sandro Mezzadra and Jesús Carrillo. Moderator: Francesco Salvini.
The ambiguity of the European project can be seen in its very history. The antifascist brotherhood of the “founding fathers” never questioned the colonial and imperialist reality of the founding nations. The return of the repressed lives in the peripheries of European cities, as the post-colonial reality; banlieue, internal borders and the political exclusion of millions of people. At the same time, the convulsions of the globalisation process all over the world put the continent in a provincial position, i.e. no longer central. The end of the colonial legacy of the European nations is considered a condition for democratic emancipation on the continent.
19:30 – 20:30 Roundtable 4: Towards a New Social Contract for Culture
Discussion between Carmen Mörsch, Hilary Wainwright and Bojana Piskur. Moderator: Yaiza Hernández.
Culture, which was one of the pillars of the ideological reconstruction of Europe after the war, has seen its enlightened foundations slowly erode as a result of its enclosure in the market and in art institutions, and because of its distance from society’s conflicts and contemporary subjectification processes. What would be the basic elements of this new contract that would put culture at the centre of social emancipation processes?
20:30 – 21:00 Q&A
Participants
Valery Alzaga. Chicana union organiser and migrant rights activist. She has also worked as a union co-ordinator in Europe and Africa. She is researching the development of new forms of bio-unionism and emotional organisation.
Zdenka Badovinac. Director of Moderna Galerija in Ljubljana (Slovenia) since 1993. Curator and art historian. Founding and executive member of the European museum network L’Internationale.
Manuel Borja-Villel. Director of Museo Reina Sofía since 2008. He has also been the director of Fundació Tàpies (1990-1998) and of MACBA (1998-2007). Executive member of the European museum network L´Internationale.
Ada Colau. Activist and spokesperson of PAH (Platform for Mortgage Victims). She has been involved in numerous social movements since 2001. She is the co-author, along with Adriá Alemany, of the book Vidas hipotecadas. De la burbuja inmobiliaria al derecho a la vivienda (2012).
Jesús Carrillo. Head of Cultural Programs at Museo Reina Sofía and professor of art history at Universidad Autónoma de Madrid.
Montserrat Galcerán. Professor of philosophy at Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Social activist and writer, she is the author of Innovación tecnológica y sociedad de masas (1997) and Deseo (y) libertad. Presupuestos de la acción colectiva (2009).
Marina Garcés. Professor of philosophy at the University of Zaragoza and consultant at Universitat Oberta de Catalunya. Since 2002 she has been promoting and coordinating the collective project Espai en Blanc, which works towards an engaged, practical and experimental relationship with philosophical thought. She is the author of Un mundo común (2013) and En las prisiones de lo posible (2012).
Yaiza Hernández. Lecturer in the MRes Art at Central Saint Martins (London) and a PhD candidate at the Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy. Until 2012, she was Head of Public Programmes at MACBA, before that, she worked as director of CENDEAC (Murcia) and curator at CAAM (Las Palmas). She have recently published Inter/Multi/Cross/Trans. (Montehermoso, 2011). She is currently preparingRepressive Tolerance, and General Theory.
Isabell Lorey. Visiting professor of political theory at the Centre for Gender Studies at the University of Basel. She conducts research about the precarization of work and life in neoliberal society, social movements, democracy and representation. She is part of the collective kpD -kleines postfordistisches Drama- and she has published, among other works, Governmentality and self-precarization (2006) andOccupy! Die aktuellen Kämpfe um die Besetzung des Politischen (2012).
Sandro Mezzadra. Professor of contemporary political theory and post-colonial studies at the University of Bologna. He is co-director of the magazine DeriveApprodi, a member of the editorial collective Studi Culturali and he also contributes to the newspaper Il Manifesto. He has published The Right to Escape. Migration, citizenship and globalization (2004) and La condizione postcoloniale. Storia e politica nel mondo globale (2008), among other works.
Carmen Mörsch. Artist, educator and researcher. Director of the Institute for Art Education (IAE) of Zurich University of the Arts (Switzerland) and advisor and head researcher for the educational program Documenta 12.
Antonio Negri. Post-operaist philosopher and thinker, co-author, with Michael Hardt, of Empire (2002), Multitude: War and Democracy in the Age of Empire (2004) and Commonwealth (2011) and Declaration (2013).
Bojana Piskur. Art historian, curator at the Moderna Galerija of Ljubljana and a founding member of the group Radical Education.
Francesco Salvini. Sociologist and researcher at Queen Mary University, he also forms part of the social centre Exit-Raval and of Universidad Nómada.
Ranabir Samaddar. Director of the Calcutta Research Group. He has conducted numerous studies on the human rights issue in the conflicts of South Asia. He is the author of The Politics of Dialogue (2004), Emergence of the Political Subject (2009) and The Nation Form (2012).
Raúl Sánchez Cedillo. Translator and editor of books by authors such as Toni Negri and Felix Guattari. Since the 1990s he has been involved in various political networks and research groups in post-operaist circles. He is part of Universidad Nómada and of the Fundación de los Comunes.
Hilary Wainwright. Feminist sociologist and activist, she is a researcher at the Transnational Institute and at the International Centre for Participation Studies (ICPS). She is the editor and co-founder of the British magazine Red Pepper.
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