(Source: global-inequality.com)
We learned of a call for papers
for a symposium on the intellectual history of global inequality since 1945. Here
the call:
This two-day symposium is
designed to investigate the global intellectual history of inequality. It will
do so through a double global lens: How have intellectuals from around the
world thought about inequality in the world? The aim of the symposium is to
contribute with a new transnational intellectual history of inequality in
different geographical and cultural contexts. The symposium will investigate
links, differences and similarities between different intellectual traditions,
as well as the circulation of inequality concepts and knowledge across
countries. It aspires to facilitate a unique transcultural and multi-linguistic
knowledge about inequality concepts, contributing to the fields of global
conceptual and intellectual history. The symposium will aim at a special
journal issue on the global intellectual history of inequality, exploring
relationships between geographical anchoring (place) and thinking on inequality
in history. We are delighted that the journal Global Intellectual
History has kindly agreed to be the host of this special issue.
Critics of global intellectual history have rightfully pointed out that few
connections are actually truly global (planetary), but can much more adequately
be described as transnational or transcultural (or ‘transcolonial’ or
‘transimperial’) connections. Taking this criticism into account, we are
interested both in learning more about the intellectual histories of inequality
in non-western countries, including in non-English, indigenous languages.
Secondly, we are interested in learning more about intellectual
and conceptual histories of transnational connections between various
parts of the world, such as North-South and South-South connections and
intellectual biographies of key thinkers on inequality whose histories are
linked to several countries and continents. How did intellectuals across the
globe address inequalities in a post-world war II age of ‘development’,
promises of universal human rights, new data on inequalities, and of the
crucial historical dynamics of the Cold War and decolonization?
The full call for papers can be
found here
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