2024

Historical Materialism Cluj-Napoca 

August 29-31, 2024

Polycrisis across Divides

(updated March 2024)

That we live in a state of permanent polycrisis is a well-established truth: ecological crisis, economic depressions, political failure, social breakdown, wars, and pandemics have all been piling up, intersecting and escalating one another in implacable ways. What is less clear is the way in which this complex global polycrisis is articulated and manifesting in the various sub-components of the world system, across the divides of this multipolar and multi-imperialist world capitalist formation. Particularly, but not exclusively, this first Historical Materialism conference in Eastern Europe will be interested in the specific place of the region in today’s polycritical world: what is the role of the old “Second World” in today’s global context dominated by a still hegemonic and expanding (while also retreating) First World and a fragmented, dominated, yet increasingly assertive Global South? But also, what is the place and meaning of the former socialist bloc in the global history of Marxism, critical theory and social movements? Which of its legacies are worth rediscovering, resurrecting, or instead should be discontinued?

Besides the streams covering problematics pertaining to Eastern Europe, the conference welcomes presentations and panels on all the traditional themes and topics of the Historical Materialism series, as well as discussions on the most pressing and critical aspects of today’s world, with a particular emphasis on materialist readings of recent developments in media, technology & popular culture.

Whilst we encourage papers and panels that address these themes, the Historical Materialism Cluj Conference seeks to provide a space for critical Marxist theory and research across the globe and the range of disciplines and interests. Other papers and panels that enrich Marxist understandings – historical and contemporary – of theory and philosophy, culture, politics, political economy and societies under modern capitalism are also welcome.

The organizational committee of Historical Materialism Cluj 2024 can be reached at hmcluj2024@gmail.com

Please note that individual papers and panels should include:

  • Names of participants with e-mails and affiliations, and clear indication of a corresponding author where there is more than one participant
  • Title of paper or panel - In the case of a paper, an abstract of no longer than 300 words. In the case of panels, an overarching description of 300 words and as relevant, abstracts for individual papers.

Partial submissions may be rejected if they are incomplete. Please submit panels here and papers here.  

We invite submissions from all producers of knowledge, working within or outside institutions (researchers, students, educators, activists, organizers, cultural workers, artists, writers, translators, editors, journalists, etc.), in a variety of formats. Apart from papers and panels, which can be submitted via the online form, we warmly welcome proposals for roundtables, book launches, debates, workshops, etc. Please send a brief description (300 words) of your planned event, including bios of all participants to: hmcluj2024@gmail.com.

We still believe that this particular format of the in-person conference offers a unique and irreplaceable form that brings together comrades, enables discussion, helps the dissemination of new and original research, creates research networks and communities, and builds solidarity. This is why we will not normally accept online presentations. We would also note that we do engage in online broadcasts and podcasts all year round for such sessions.

As in the past, the conference ethos is strictly egalitarian. This means everyone is invited to contribute in a comradely spirit, the conference is open to all currents of critical Marxist theory and we expect all presenters to attend the entire conference, not just their own session (with no ‘cameo appearances’). The conference is an important part of the broader Historical Materialism project – including the journal, the book series, and the global network of HM conferences – and we want to encourage all conference participants to get involved with these different elements, for example by submitting their conference paper to the journal.

 

Conference streams:

  1. Eastern Europe: Socialist Traditions and Contemporary Politics, Society & Economy
  2. Ecosocialism and Ecological Crisis
  3. Feminism: Theory, Practice, Politics, and Debates
  4. Care Work and the Value of Labor
  5. State and Territory
  6. Marxist Thought and Critical Theory Today
  7. Literature, Film & Media: New Perspectives from the Left
  8. From the Techno-Scientific Revolution to Big Tech

 

Deadline for abstracts [EXTENDED]: April 15, 2024

Conference fees: 

     Solidarity donations: 150 EUR;

     High-waged: 100 EUR;

     Mid-waged: 50 EUR;

     Low-waged: 20 EUR;

     Unwaged, students, freelancers, and unaffiliated: free.

We offer free accommodation for unwaged, unaffiliated, freelancers, and student participants, within our availabilities, as well as affordable or free catering options for all conference participants. Updates will follow.

Check out our Keynote Speakers here.

This conference is organised under the aegis of Historical Materialism: Research in Critical Marxist Theory (http://www.historicalmaterialism.org/), which supports a journal (http://www.historicalmaterialism.org/journal) a book series (https://brill.com/view/serial/HM) and Marxist conferences across the globe. The conference is part of the PHILSE project ran by Janovics Center for Screen and Performing Arts Studies at BBU Cluj-Napoca and partnered by tranzit.ro/cluj.

Mariya Ivancheva is an anthropologist and sociologist, whose work focuses on the role of academic and student communities in broader processes of social change especially in transitions to/from socialism. She works at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, and is a founding member of the LeftEast and LevFem collectives.

Agnes Gagyi is a sociologist working on East European politics and social movements from the perspective of the region's long-term world-economic and geopolitical integration. She is researcher at the University of Gothenburg, and co-founder of Solidarity Economy Center, Budapest.

Vesa Oittinen is Professor of Philosophy at the Aleksanteri Institute of the University of Helsinki. His research focuses on the history of modern philosophy, especially German, Scandinavian, and Russian philosophy. He is currently also a docent of the history of philosophy at the University of Tampere. Vesa Oittinen defended his thesis in the 1990s on French structuralist and post-structuralist readings of Spinoza and he is currently the chairman of the Karl Marx Society.

Dr. Volodymyr Ishchenko is a research associate at the Institute for East European Studies, Freie Universität Berlin. His research focuses on protests and social movements, revolutions, radicalization, right and left politics, nationalism, and civil society. He published widely on contemporary Ukrainian politics, the Euromaidan revolution, and the ensuing war. He has been a prominent contributor to The Guardian, Al Jazeera, New Left Review, and Jacobin. He is the author of Towards the Abyss: Ukraine from Maidan to War (Verso, 2024).

Dr. Adriana Qubaiova is Visiting Professor at the Central European University in Austria. She is a feminist researcher specialized in theories of sexuality in West Asia (Middle East). She has held visiting roles in the University of Vienna and the Academy of Fine Arts, and is committed to feminist, queer, leftist, and pro-Palestine politics in her research and teaching.

Acces full program HERE