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Spring Mellon Sawyer Seminar Launches Apr. 1 with Sinan Antoon

Sinan Antoon

The Andrew W. Mellon Sawyer Seminar, "Humanitarianisms," launches its Spring events on April 1st. Author Sinan Antoon will discuss how material and discursive resources and energies are dedicated (insufficiently and unequally) to rescue the living from harm, and to tend to their wounds. Antoon asks, but what of the dead? What can we, the living, learn from the rituals and traditions of tending to the dead and to their wounds? Beyond the corporeal, encounters with the ghosts and memories of the dead raise crucial political questions about the ways in which humans inhabit this world. Al-Ma’arri cautioned us a millennium ago to “tread gently, for the soil of this earth is made of these corpses.” This talk will summon al-Ma’arri’s ghost, among others, to address these questions.

Selim S. Kuru (Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Near Eastern Languages & Civilization) will join the webinar as discussant. Kuru is a philologist and literary historian. His work on early modern Ottoman imperial literary culture focuses on poetics and poetry in the lives of the governing elite.

Registration for the Mellon Sawyer Seminar is Required.

About the Sawyer Seminar Series:

Through this project, we seek to decolonize the rhetoric and understanding of humanitarianism by examining the histories of forced migration and practices of humanitarian care for forced migrants, including both ‘conventional’ and ‘humanitarian refugees’, that developed outside of Europe and North America. In order to do so, we are pursuing a comparative examination of these issues through three thematic clusters—Decentering Migration and Decolonizing Humanitarianism, Comparative Humanitarianisms, and Rethinking the Human—each of which builds on the previous cluster and thus creates threads of inquiry that will frame a public speaker series and the work of a faculty and graduate student research group.

 

Spring Quarter 2021

Rethinking the Human through Comparative Humanitarianisms

The final component of this Sawyer Seminar is an investigation into what new forms of humanity have arisen or may emerge from the articulations of humanitarianisms through the Global South. If Enlightenment ‘humanitarian reason’ was premised on an new- found concern for the suffering of distant others, we believe that this theme, with a focus on the Global South and attention to diverse genealogies of care, may inform new possibilities for understanding the diversity of how people make sense of what it means to be human through encounters with suffering and everyday practices of care. We allow for the possibility that this inquiry will need to embrace and encompass different modalities of life and recognize different ends of humanness, now not only in relation to the suffering of distant others, but also to the supernatural, the environment, other (non-human) species, and even the dead—who are often assumed to be beyond the limits of care. This understanding can prompt us to explore further the forces that underlie our own perceptions of humanness and lead to new ones. Thus, we seek to explore what a rethinking of humanitarianisms’ diverse genealogies tells us about new ways to conceptualize the human in comparative contexts. Therefore, in this final thematic cluster, we ask: How does the affective life of humanitarian administration inform people’s subjective sense of what it means to be human? What does it mean for our common humanity if we take into consideration the multitude of ways that humans interact with their environments? How do these interactions shape their disciplines of care for others?

Upcoming Events

  • April 1, 2021 | 3:30pm | Registration Required | WEBINAR | Sinan Antoon: "Rescuing the Dead"
  • April 22, 2021| 3:30pm | Registration Required | WEBINAR| Dean Spade & Cristian Capotescu
  • May 6, 2021 | 3:30pm | Registration Required | WEBINAR | Juno Salazar Perreñas & Nermeen Mouftah

 

Winter Quarter 2021

Comparative Humanitarianisms

In this part of the Sawyer Seminar, we will ask: What are the other humanitarian logics that shape when and how communities provide care and refuge to migrants or victims of emergencies? Building on the previous concern with decentering the West from presumptive ownership of humanitarianism, this theme seeks to explore other ideologies, movements, values, or beliefs that underlie a concern with the suffering of distant others. We will engage a genealogical study of humanitarianism that begins, not with European moral sentiments from the eighteenth century, but with the traditions, philosophies, and values, such as service, hospitality, gift- giving, or mercy, which preceded and perhaps influenced such moral reasoning. A significant body of inquiry establishes these connections through examination of faith-based aid networks. Our focus here is rather than accepting prima facie that such efforts stand to the side of ‘real’ humanitarianism, these practices may indeed underlie and legitimate practices of care as they have developed and as they function as a part of daily experiences and ethical ideals of both care-givers and care-receivers.

This theme allows us to consider vernacular humanitarianisms by exploring the new global humanitarian project as one founded on hybrid formations of the management of care through practices that recognize human suffering, the labor and principles of providing care, and the transformations produced though exchanges of material and affective expressions of care. Islamic humanitarianism is one such example and an important focus for our Seminar, not only because Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon, Iran, Pakistan, and Bangladesh, the hosts that have taken in 85% of the world’s refugees, are predominantly Muslim-majority countries, but also because several of these countries are not parties to either the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status on Refugees nor the 1967 Protocol, and thus have no legal duty to take in refugees. As five of the six top host countries for forced migrants are Muslim- majority, examining how people articulate Islamic values as both a force of faith and as a source of intellectual knowledge that underwrites logics of care will be a key focus of this section on Comparative Humanitarianism. This is all the more so where the literature on humanitarianism has marked Islam as an exception to care, and as having distinct logics, such as a compulsion to charity that, for some, challenges the possibility of an authentic concern for the suffering of others. This characterization, however, misses a key component in an intellectual exploration of Islam: that it is not charity, but rather an ethical sensibility to build a more just and compassionate society, that defines Islam’s theory of care, one that emphasizes equity not equality.  Because this Seminar goes beyond the study of charitable organizations in comparative humanitarian practices, our focus will be on inviting speakers who will address the ethical systems, logics, and rationalities of care that underlie everyday practices of humanitarianism as a form of caring labor across cultural and religious traditions in the Global South.

Event Archive

  • January 21, 2021 | 9:30-10:30am PST | WEBINAR | Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, “Shifting the Gaze: Southern-led Humanitarian Responses to Displacement”
  • February 4, 2021 | 3:30-4:30pm PST | WEBINAR | Amira Mittermaier, “God, Humans, and an Islamic Ethics of Care” & Sienna Craig, “Himalayan Humanitarianisms: Crisis Response from Earthquakes to Pandemics”
  • February 18, 2021 | 3:30-4:30pm PST | WEBINAR | China Scherz, “Seeking the Wounds of the Gift: Recipient Agency in Catholic Charity and Kiganda Patronage” & Basit Iqbal, “Ambivalence and Askesis in Zaatari Refugee Camp”

Fall Quarter 2020

Decentering Migration and Decolonizing Humanitarianism

This part of the Sawyer Seminar will focus on the history of forced migrations within and across the Global South (especially East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, and the Mediterranean). Our selection of invited speakers will aim to show that humanitarian practices do not emerge from a singular genealogy, but that the intense attention to migration in these regions reveals a series of misperceived assumptions about the Euro-American origins of practices surrounding humanitarianism and on misunderstandings of the politics of international asylum and refugee laws that grew out of World War II as part of a mandate for a new world order. We believe that the decentering of migration and the decolonizing of humanitarianism requires two key intellectual moves. The first involves locating the flows of forced migrants in the Global South, the primary sites for hosting, in order to ask: How does a focus on host countries reorient our understanding of the spaces of care? The second involves moving away from a Euro-American intellectual history in order to ask: What are the ideological underpinnings of caring for distant- others outside of Enlightenment frames? We envision that such comparative reorientations will transform our perspectives on humanitarian care to integrate the diverse rationalities and forms of expertise that underlie them. This thematic cluster will also examine how international law and politics from the seventeenth century shaped categories of migration by defining acceptable and unacceptable forms, such as fleeing political and religious persecution (acceptable) versus environmental change or natural disasters (unacceptable). We invite our speakers to consider the discursive (including legal discourse) processes through which entire regions of the world were written out of the narrative of humanitarian care.

Event Archive

  • October 8, 2020 | RECORDED WEBINAR | Anne McNevin, "Sovereignty, Welcome, and Epistemic Hospitality"
  • November 12, 2020 | RECORDED WEBINAR | Ilana Feldman, “Humanitarian Rights and Palestinian Presence” & Pamela Ballinger, “Provincializing the 1951 Geneva Convention on Refugees”
  • December 3, 2020 | RECORDED WEBINAR | Jessica Whyte, “‘The Opposite of Humanity’: Anti-colonial Challenges to International Humanitarian Law” & Emma Meyer, “Managing Migrants, Resettling Refugees”
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