Call for Papers
Dating back to the beginnings of Greek democracy and the Platonic conception of the philosopher king, the relations between power and knowledge have recently come back to the fore with the rise of populism or the sanitary crisis. Whether an obstacle to democracy, a means for citizens to control their representatives or a vehicle for regenerating democracy (Mounk, 2018), knowledge now appears, more than ever before, as a constitutive feature of government.
This interdisciplinary conference will seek to explore the implications of such relations since the 18th century and to examine to what extent knowledge may establish, legitimize or discredit the forms and figures of political power.
Alongside the democratic ideal, the specialisation and secularisation of knowledge during the Enlightenment gave rise to conceptions of a social order based on knowledge, be it Robert Owen’s utopian schemes, Comtean positivism or the clerisy called for by S. T. Coleridge. As mass democracy spurred the growth and influence of political parties, debating societies and think tanks appeared with the aim of influencing political decision-makers as well as public opinion, precipitating reforms and asserting the dominance of thought over action (Stone & Denham, 2004; Landry, 2021). In the liberal and democratic project, education has come to represent a valuable means of promoting citizenship for reformers ranging from philanthropists, socialists and liberals, to philosophical traditions such as British idealism or American pragmatism (Tyler, 2006; Dewey, 1916). On a broader scale, _cultural critics_ or intellectuals have invoked their learning or
expertise to purportedly counterbalance institutional power or to exert influence in the public sphere.
That knowledge may imply coercion has been the butt of criticism from multiple traditions. Together with the poststructuralist movement inspired by Michel Foucault or _cultural studies_, critics of modernity such as Eric Voegelin, hostile to what he deemed a gnostic conception of power, or Carl Schmitt, for whom Hegel’s philosophy implied an “educational dictatorship”, have concurred in their questioning of Enlightenment optimism, dismissing knowledge as a necessary condition for progress and holding it to be the locus of a political struggle.
The debate has been central to the theorization of disciplines, understood as fields of knowledge that presuppose the existence of “disciples” and therefore some form of authority (Moran, 2002). If
the specialisation of knowledge seems inevitably linked to the world being perceived as increasingly complex, what are the checks on experts’ judgements? Can a government reliant on specialised knowledge be genuinely democratic? Can philosophy, as Nietzsche would have it, challenge the claims of objectivity and disinterestedness voiced by “we, scholars”? Or should principles and values regulating knowledge and information in the public sphere be formulated to overcome the current “epistemic tribalism” underlying the surge in disinformation and conspiracy theories (Rauch, (2021)?
Papers may discuss, but are not limited to
- Experts, intellectuals, scholars in the public sphere
_- Think tanks_ and _debating societies_ and their relations with rulers, parties and ideologies
- Historiography as a political project
- The disciplinary evolution of economics: depoliticisation and politicisation
- Knowledge as constitutive of national identity
- The fashioning of the elite (intellectual trajectories and influences, training, _Oxbridge_, the _Ivy League_, the formation of canons…)
- Committed academics and knowledge as a channel for protest: _Cultural Studies_ theorists and practitioners, neo-Conservative intellectuals, _cultural critics_…
- The specialisation of knowledge and democratic representation
Indicative bibliography
Burrow, J.W., _The Crisis of Reason. European Thought, 1848-1914, _New Haven, Yale UP, 2000
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, _On the Constitution of the Church and State, _in _The Collected Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge_, vol. 10, Ed. John Colmer, London, Routledge & Kegan Paul/Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1976
Collini, Stefan, _Absent Minds: Intellectuals in Britain_, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2006
Comte, Auguste, _Discours sur l’ensemble du positivisme_, Paris, Garnier Flammarion, 1998__
Dewey, John, “Democracy and Education”, in _Middle Works _(1977), Ed. J. Boydston and A. Carbondale, Illinois, Southern Illinois University Press, 1983
Dillow, Chris, The End of Politics: New Labour and the Folly of Managerialism, Petersfield, Harriman House Publishing, 2007
Dow, Sheila C, and John Hillard, Keynes, Knowledge and Uncertainty, London, Edward Elgar Publishing, 1995
Drayton, Richard. Nature’s Government: Science, Imperial Britain and the ‘Improvement’ of the World, New Haven, Yale UP, 2000
Foucault, Michel, _L’ordre du discours_, Paris, Gallimard, 1971
_Surveiller et punir_, Paris, Gallimard, 1975
Goodhart, David, _Head, Hand, Heart: The Struggle for Dignity and Status in the 21st Century__, London, Penguin, 2020___
Hall, Stuart, “The West and the Rest: Discourse and Power”, in _Modernity: An introduction to modern societies_, Ed. S. Hall, D. Held, D. Hubert, and K. Thompson, Malden, MA: Blackwell, 1996
Hayek, Friedrich A. von, “The Use of Knowledge in Society” (1945), in _The Collected Works of F.A. Hayek_, Ed. Bruce Caldwell, vol. 15, Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 2014
Landry, Julien, Critical Perspectives on Think Tanks [1], London, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2021
Lasch, Christopher, The Revolt of the Elites and the Betrayal of Democracy, New York and London, Norton and Co., 1995__
Lubenow, William C., _Liberal Intellectuals and Public Culture in Modern Britain, 1815-1914. Making Words Flesh_, The Boydell Press, 2010
Medema, Steven G., _The Hesitant Hand: Taming Self-interest in the History of Economic Ideas_, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2009
Monbiot, George, _Out of the Wreckage: A New Politics for an Age of Crisis_, London, Verso, 2017
Moran, Joe, _Interdisciplinarity_, London, Routledge, 2002
Nietzsche, Friedrich, _Par-delà le bien et le mal_ (1886), Paris, Gallimard, 1987
Owen, Robert, _A New View of Society and Other Writings_ (1813), London, J. M. Dent & Sons, 1963
Parry, Chris, and Robert Protherough, _Managing Britannia: Culture and Management In Modern Britain_, London, Edgway Books, 2002
Rauch, Jonathan, _The Constitution of Knowledge: A Defense of Truth_, Washington, Brookings, 2021
Schmitt, Carl, _Parlementarisme et démocratie_ (1923), Paris, Seuil, 1988
Stone, Diane and Andrew Denham (Ed.), _Think tank Traditions. Policy Analysis Across Nations_, Manchester, Manchester University Press, 2004__
Tyler, Colin, _Idealist Political Philosophy: Pluralism and Conflict in the Absolute Idealist Tradition_, London, Bloomsbury, 2006
Voegelin, Eric, _The New Science of Politics_ (1952), Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1987
Organising committee
Vanessa Boullet (Université de Lorraine)
Pauline Collombier (Université de Strasbourg)
Stéphane Guy (Université de Lorraine)
Linda Mathlouthi (Université de Lorraine)
Alice Monter (Université de Lorraine)
Peterson Nnajiofor (Université de Lorraine)
Ecem Okan (Université de Lorraine)
Françoise Orazi (Université Lumière Lyon II)
Rafal Soborski (Richmond: The American International University in London, UK)
Colin Tyler (University of Hull, UK)
Submissions
Please send proposals in English or in French (300 words maximum) and a short biography to powerandknowledge@sciencesconf.org by 24th June 2022. You will be notified early July about the committee’s decision.