Experimental Humanities Program Presents
In Defense of Error and Spectacle: New Genealogies for Experimental Humanities, a Lecture by Mitsos Bilalis and Penelope Papailias
Tuesday, March 27, 2018
Olin Humanities, Room 102
5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
When the humanities emerge as a field in early modernity, experimentation is a core practice. Could we possibly not describe Galileo as a “humanist”? Spinoza as a “scientist”? Disciplinary specialization and the ascendance of the historicist paradigm as a regime of truth, however, cut the humanities off from the tradition of experimentation and, by extension, from the predominance—and productivity—of error in research and teaching. In our late/digital modernity, as we are faced not only with the collapse of the “market” for humanities research within neoliberal universities, but also with a public culture of “fake” news, “conjectural” histories and “derivative” fanfic across a media ecology in which “truth” has been gamified, the retreat to empiricism (“Truth. It has no alternative,” the New York Times reminds us) would be a predictable move for scholars like us. By contrast, in our presentation, we propose to (re)discover both the error and the public and performative staging at the heart of the experimental through a combination of historical vignettes and snapshots of our contemporary forays into experimental humanities that succeeded, if on a modest scale, in creating charged, unstable, and generative networks incorporating, invigorating, and rupturing the “university” (from summer labs and death cafés to the reopening of the “book” through social annotation and collective reading).5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
With guest appearance of Joy Al Nemri ’18, a student in the initial ‘Pelion Summer Lab for Critical Theory and Experimental Humanities’
For more information, call 845-758-6822, or e-mail [email protected].
Time: 5:00 pm – 6:00 pm EDT/GMT-4
Location: Olin Humanities, Room 102