27 Sep 2019
How can one expand freedom in the university in times of repression and neoliberal austerity?
Sarah Nuttall
Video in English
Format: mp4Length: 01:03:47
First published on: https://www.ici-berlin.org/events/truth-freedom-and-the-academy/
Rights: © ICI Berlin
Part of the Workshop
Truth, Freedom, and the Academy
Freedom, likewise, is in a bind. Seventy-five years after World War II and the defeat of fascism, and thirty years since the end of the Cold War, the fall of the Berlin wall, and the end of apartheid, the self-congratulatory Euro-American discourse of ‘75 Years of Freedom’ is largely uncontested. Talk of freedom legitimizes all sorts of enforcement actions. And yet not just across the European continent but worldwide, freedom seems to have had its promises hollowed out or to actively be on the retreat. How can demands for substantive freedom be materialized, practices of liberation be defended, and claims for new freedoms be articulated without reinforcing the power of its official guardians?
The academy is one of the most contested battlegrounds in this double conflict. In the US, the scholarship of climate change, which is not just one example among others, is under assault. In more and more places scholars themselves are at risk of censorship, violence, exclusion, and repression. The university is at once one of the oldest and most entrenched institutions controlling truth, and the site of a deep commitment to an ongoing practice of free and unconstrained reflection, contestation, and intellectual upheaval. Does defending academic freedom and scholars at risk necessarily imply re-affirming the old authority and power of the academy, or can it contribute to a renewal of the critical, sceptical, dissident potential in teaching and research? What new ideas and practices of education and knowledge production, or understandings of the university itself, might be called for?
Venue
ICI Berlin(Click for further documentation)
With
Kerry BystromWolfgang Kaleck
Thomas Keenan
Aysuda Kölemen
Sarah Nuttall
Renata Uitz
Russ West-Pavlov
Organized by
Kerry BystromThomas Keenan
Generously supported by the Philipp Schwartz Initiative of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation and the Bard Center for Civic Engagement.