Martin Crowley, “Exscription as Ecopoetics”: 13/14 LCCP Sharing Finitude Symposium
Martin Crowley is Professor of Modern French Thought and Culture, and Director of the French Section, at the University of Cambridge. He also serves as General Editor of the journal, French Studies. He has published various articles and book chapters engaging with Nancy’s work, and his book, L’Homme sans: Politiques de la finitude (Lignes, 2009), features an afterword by Nancy. His latest book, Accidental Agents: Ecological Politics beyond the Human, will be published by Columbia University Press in January 2022. ----- Leiden University Centre for Continental Philosophy (LCCP), the University of Amsterdam’s Critical Cultural Theory Seminar (CCT) and Knooppunt Fenomenologie Gent welcome all interested persons to a symposium on Jean-Luc Nancy’s work on 11-12 January 2022. Jean-Luc Nancy met death definitively in August 2021. One imagines that he had come close to death before, notably at the time when he had to endure a heart transplantation. This personal experience had major philosophical consequences: it did not lead to somber meditations of the shortness of life, but on the contrary to another kind of finite thinking, where finitude is thought as function of the necessary plurality of bodies which are the sense of the world: finitude is the very sharing of finitude. The sense of the world is nothing else than the singular plurality of bodies. The work of Jean-Luc Nancy radiates a rare joy of life, but it is also very sensitive to what he called the ‘immonde’, the un-worlding that manifests itself as the eco-technical misery that presses the world of bodies. He diagnosed the fundamental philosophical reasons of this un- worlding, but above all he sought philosophical tools to re-world existence. Many of these tools are rooted in the polysemy of "sense," that leads Nancy's work to sensitive and even sensual questions of art, to questions of the sense of the world and of religion, and of course to questions of the way in which philosophy makes sense, word by word, enunciation by enunciation. Wishing to share the emotion of Jean-Luc Nancy's passing away, we want above all to share the experience of thinking finitude with the help of his unique, singular work. This is why we invite you to a symposium in which all aspects of Nancy's abundant work will be discussed and new openings will be explored.

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