The Solution Is in the Room: A Critical Phenomenology of Conflict Space

The Solution Is in the Room: A Critical Phenomenology of Conflict Space

Season 7 continues with another presentation from our 2022 annual conference, Engaged Phenomenology II: Explorations of Embodiment, Emotions, and Spatiality. This episode features a presentation from Niclas Rautenberg of the University of Essex, UK Abstract: Though the relevance of conflict is universally acknowledged in political theory, it rarely is investigated as a political phenomenon in its own right. Instead, philosophical approaches to conflict are end-state theories, i.e., oriented towards the desirable states of affairs after a conflict is mastered. Moreover, these theories do not fully appreciate the particularities of real conflict participants’ experiences and the way these factor in in formulating effective solutions to conflict. Attempting to provide a first step into remedying these shortcomings, this paper discusses the significance of the spatiality of conflict events. Drawing on qualitative interviews I conducted with political actors – politicians, officials, and activists – and on Martin Heidegger’s account of space in Being and Time, I will argue that conflict space, existentially understood as a space of action, is co-constituted by the respective conflict participants, as well as the location where the conflict unfolds. Understood this way, location and conflict parties’ (self-)understandings enable and constrain ways of seeing and acting. This includes to ‘see’ the solution(s) to a conflict. Yet, a purely transcendental phenomenology will remain oblivious to the quasi-transcendental, social structures that shape a person’s conflict experience. Actual conflicts do not take place behind a ‘veil of ignorance;’ their situation is not ‘ideal.’ Instead, conflict spaces, as any other political spaces, are spaces of power. Hence, to illuminate these facets of the phenomenon, phenomenology has to become critical. Combining insights from interviews with Black Lives Matter activists and Rosemarie Garland-Thomson’s notion of misfit, I will argue that power shapes conflict space in three ways: who chooses the conflict location/who may enter it; who builds a conflict location/for whom is it built; and the agent-relative difference in scopes of possible actions and experiences afforded by the location. Taking conflict seriously, then, involves coming to grips with the where of conflict. Biography: Niclas is a doctoral student at the University of Essex. His dissertation analyses philosophical approaches to political conflict. A particular emphasis rests on the phenomenology of conflict, appreciating the complexity and diversity of the phenomenon in modern polities. To this end, he conducts interviews with political actors. His interests include phenomenology (especially applied and critical), political and social philosophy. His research is funded by the German Academic Scholarship Foundation and the Consortium for the Arts and Humanities South-East England. He is also a research assistant at the interdisciplinary project ‘What does Artificial Intelligence Mean for the Future of Democratic Society?’ Further Information: This recording is taken from our Annual UK Conference 2022: Engaged Phenomenology II: Explorations of Embodiment, Emotions, and Sociality (Exeter, UK / Hybrid) with the University of Exeter. Sponsored by the Wellcome Centre, Egenis, and the Shame and Medicine project. For the conference our speakers either presented in person at Exeter or remotely to people online and in-room, and the podcast episodes are recorded from the live broadcast feeds. The British Society for Phenomenology is a not-for-profit organisation set up with the intention of promoting research and awareness in the field of Phenomenology and other cognate arms of philosophical thought. Currently, the society accomplishes these aims through its journal, events, and podcast. About our events: https://www.thebsp.org.uk/events/ About the BSP: https://www.thebsp.org.uk/about/

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Spyridon Kaltsas - Hope and the Future in the Neo-Pragmatism of Richard Rorty

Spyridon Kaltsas - Hope and the Future in the Neo-Pragmatism of Richard Rorty

Season 8 continues with a recording from our 2021 annual conference, The Future as a Present Concern.   This episode features a presentation from Spyridon Kaltsas   Abstract: Hope and the Future in t...

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Tristan Hedges - His habitual attitude: Exploring the praxis of Husserl’s epoché through personal pronouns

Tristan Hedges - His habitual attitude: Exploring the praxis of Husserl’s epoché through personal pronouns

Season 8 continues with a recording from our 2021 annual conference, The Future as a Present Concern.   This episode features a presentation from Tristan Hedges   Abstract: Edmund Husserl’s The Crisi...

29 Apr 19min

Lorenzo Buti - The future as an untranscendable fate: a Sartrean view of depoliticization

Lorenzo Buti - The future as an untranscendable fate: a Sartrean view of depoliticization

Season 8 continues with a recording from our 2021 annual conference, The Future as a Present Concern.   This episode features a presentation from Lorenzo Buti.   Abstract: This paper reconceptualises...

27 Apr 19min

Tanay Gandhi - Misbehaving Mountains: The Politics of a Future in Flux

Tanay Gandhi - Misbehaving Mountains: The Politics of a Future in Flux

Season 8 continues with a recording from our 2021 annual conference, The Future as a Present Concern.   This episode features a presentation from Tanay Gandhi   Abstract: The future is often cast in ...

24 Apr 24min

Martin Ritter - Saving the future in the present. Benjamin on (con)temporary revolutionary experience

Martin Ritter - Saving the future in the present. Benjamin on (con)temporary revolutionary experience

Season 8 continues with a recording from our 2021 annual conference, The Future as a Present Concern.   This episode features a presentation from Martin Ritter   Abstract: From the perspective of the...

22 Apr 18min

Alexandra S. Ilieva - Utopias and Progress: A Buddhist-Pragmatist Perspective

Alexandra S. Ilieva - Utopias and Progress: A Buddhist-Pragmatist Perspective

Season 8 continues with a recording from our 2021 annual conference, The Future as a Present Concern.   This episode features a presentation from Alexandra S. Ilieva     Abstract: If taking “the futu...

20 Apr 24min

Dr Alessandro Salice - Realist Phenomenology: A Plaidoyer

Dr Alessandro Salice - Realist Phenomenology: A Plaidoyer

Season 8 continues with a recording from our 2021 annual conference, The Future as a Present Concern.   This episode features a keynote presentation from Dr Alessandro Salice   Abstract: A spectre is...

17 Apr 42min

Prof. Sara Heinämaa - Phenomenology as Vocation: A Project Instituted by the Will for a Future

Prof. Sara Heinämaa - Phenomenology as Vocation: A Project Instituted by the Will for a Future

Season 8 continues with a recording from our 2021 annual conference, The Future as a Present Concern.   This episode features a keynote presentation from Prof. Sara Heinämaa     Abstract: In The Cris...

15 Apr 53min

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