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Summer School - Planetary Urbanscapes, 24 June - 5 July 2019, University of Bologna, Italy

Publish Date: Feb 12, 2019

Deadline: Mar 20, 2019

Event Dates: from Jun 24, 2019 12:00 to Jul 05, 2019 12:00

FULL PROGRAM

If yesterday the city was recognized as a distinctive and bounded type of settlement whose qualities resided in its sounds, rhythms and textures, today what “cities” or the “urban” are can no longer be taken for granted (see Robinson,2015).

Major shifts in urban studies have emerged through a new phase of planetary urbanization. A key manifestation of this phase is the emergence in the global South of new forms of urban landscapes of which the mega-city or meta-region phenomenon is a privileged instantiation, as Ananya Roy’s work has suggested.  Typical of this phase is also the offshore city, a physical, infrastructural and spatial assemblage which operates on the basis of internal self-containment.

Elsewhere, including in the North, cities are no longer one locality, but a complex of trans-localities, an entangled junction of multiple spatialities (see McGuirk, 2015). They are increasingly understood to be structures of feeling and affect, logistical sites and circulatory systems through which forms and bodies, goods and materials are moving and life itself is lived. They are sites of experimentation with shifting forms of governance and multi-scalar networking, while the development of urban social movements continually reframes the meaning and the scope of the “right to the city.” (Henri Lefebvre, 1968)

The 2019 Summer School will revisit early twenty-first century urban landscapes in light of these shifts. Particular attention will be paid to the extent to which their production is entangled with the movements of global capital and the vagaries of the world’s financial markets, at a time of enhanced computing and technological power, rising inequalities, escalating changes of the internal dynamics of the Earth System (see Kruth, 2018) and widespread popular authoritarianism. Of crucial importance will be the analysis of neoliberal policies based on partition from the poor city, of slum infrastructures both carrying the aftermaths, very often, of colonial violence; and of cities of extraction disconnected from histories of industrialisation. These broken landscapes, distorted by crime as well as by heterogeneous forms of public and private violence, are also often places of conviviality, unpredictable encounters, solidarity and unexpected forms of urban communing (see for example de Boeck, 2017).  To state the obvious, if the ancient polis was the origin of the concept of the political, we will be asking: what ideas of the political emerge in contemporary cityscapes?

Early twenty-first century urban landscapes are shaped by biophysical and chemical processes that transport and transform materials and energy and thus provide the conditions necessary for life. They are made and remade by changes in the climate system, including oceans and seas, wind, heat, precipitations and the atmosphere (see Derickson, 2017). Cities will be apprehended as aqueous territories capable of generating and guiding design with the environment as an active participant in the process Port cities and littoral cities in particular will be read from  their ocean edge, the materialities of their sea as well as its histories of slavery and maritime imperialism.

Finally we will pay attention to early twenty-first urban landscapes as much as works of the imagination as works of material social construction. Changing our emphasis to focus on flows and movement, migration and mediation more than on structures and settlements, we will assess the extent to which urban dwellers combine the reality of motion and the desire for stability.

Up to 40 participants will be selected and required to attend all plenary lectures, the two morning courses, and at least one afternoon class per week.

The Academy and other sponsors offer several grants covering fees, accomodation and/or travel.

How to apply

Applicants must complete and submit the application form and upload the following materials (in English) by March 20, 2019 at 3.00 pm (GMT+1):

• A detailed Curriculum Vitae
• A statement of purpose
• One letter of recommendation

Applicants accepted in the program will be notified by April 20, 2019 via email. They must confirm their participation by April 26, 2019. Registration fees are also due by May 3, 2019. For further information please write to info@aghct.org

Fees

Selected applicants will be asked to cover:

300 €  Enrollment Fees (including Welcome and Closing cocktails)

Payment of the enrollment fees is available via Bank Transfer to the Department of History and Cultures at University of Bologna

Bank Transfer Details:

• TO: Dipartimento di Storia, Culture, Civiltà dell’Università di Bologna - H275
• Bank: Unicredit S.p.a.
• IBAN number: IT68V0200802457000102271585
• SWIFT code (when asked): UNCRITMMXXX – If this does not work (depending on the particular bank), try: UNCRITM1PM7

Selected students are required to confirm their registration by paying the fees and emailing their receipt to info@aghct.org by May 3, 2019.

EXEMPTIONS AND GRANTS

The Academy is offering the following grants for the 2019 edition of the Summer School in Global Studies and Critical Theory: 

• Up to 7 grants covering fees and accommodation
• Up to 5 grants covering fees
• Up to 8 grants covering fees, accommodation, and travel costs (max 1000 euros) for Global South participants (Asia, Africa, Latin America) sponsored by UNIPOL GRUPPO.
• Up to 5 travel grants are available for Duke students admitted to the Summer School (funds provided by the Duke Graduate School and administered by the Franklin Humanities Institute). If accepted, please contact FHI Associate Director Christina Chia (christina.chia@duke.edu)
• Up to 5 grants are available for University of Virginia graduate students (when selected, please contact the Dean of Arts & Humanities).

For more information click "LINK TO ORIGINAL" below. 


This opportunity has expired. It was originally published here:

http://aghct.org/how-to-apply

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