Scholars, artists, & activists reflect on how the time of revolution & impasse disrupts neat boundaries between past, present, & future.
What is the relationship between revolution—as the tipping point of a project that ushers a new order—and our lived experience of time? How does the unique temporality of revolution, as a disruption followed by a taking of accounts, compel convictions that transform intimate and individual projects into shared investments and collective commitments? As genocidal warfare, mass incarceration, climate catastrophes, and global inequality increasingly become normalized aspects of everyday life, societies everywhere have experienced the formidable organizing of movements demanding social change and institutions of all kinds that sustain themselves by suppressing and coercing new potentials. In other words, we live in a contemporary moment that alternates between revolution and impasse. How can the humanities help us make sense of this peculiar oscillation that rips apart ideal conceptions of linear progress, ever more urgent given the violence implied by its ongoing movement? In this multidisciplinary symposium hosted as part of the Wolf Humanities Center’s 2023–2024 Forum on Revolution, scholars, artists, and activists will come together to reflect on how the time of revolution and impasse disrupts neat boundaries between past, present, and future.
Symposium organized by the Wolf Humanities Center’s 2023–2024 Research Associate Josué Chávez; Doctoral Fellows Allison Brooks-Conrad, Kirby Sokolow, and Rawad Wehbe; and Mellon Postdoctoral Fellows Alessandra Amin, José Carlos Díaz Zanelli, Alex Kreger, Timothy Malone, and Melissa Reynolds.
Jamal J. Elias,Director, Wolf Humanities Center; Walter H. and Leonore C. Annenberg Professor of the Humanities; Professor of Religious Studies, University of Pennsylvania
Huda Fakhreddine, Topic Director, Wolf Humanities Center; Associate Professor of Arabic Literature, University of Pennsylvania
10:15 am–11:45 am Vital Pasts Moderator: Melissa Reynolds, Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, Wolf Humanities Center
How does the past inform our thinking about practices of revolution? Through artistic and scholarly reflections on the relation between revolution and suffering, participants in this panel discuss the role of the past in the experience and imagination of revolutionary times.
How do critical interventions potentially revolutionize our experience of the present? The speakers in this session explore how transformations in artistic and food production redefine the parameters of what is possible in the present.
Nadine Fattaleh, Ph.D. Student, Media Culture, and Communication, New York University
Fatemeh Shams, Associate Professor, Persian Literature, University of Pennsylvania
2:45 pm–4:30 pm Revolutionary Horizons Moderator: Timothy Malone, Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow, Wolf Humanities Center
What is the relation between future horizons and the re-assigning of agency? This panel examines how new structures of feelings and the public debate of mass incarceration put at the forefront of revolutionary futurity the reconfiguration of margin and center in all aspects of social life.
Orisanmi Burton, Assistant Professor, Anthropology, American University
Nour El Rayes, Assistant Professor, Ethnomusicology, Johns Hopkins University
Robert Saleem Holbrook, Executive Director, Abolitionist Law Center; Lecturer in Law, University of Pennsylvania
Geo Maher, Abolitionist educator, organizer, and writer
4:30 pm Closing Remarks
Josué Chávez,Research Associate, Wolf Humanities Center; Ph.D. Candidate, Hispanic Studies, University of Pennsylvania