Sociétés Plurielles

Sociétés Plurielles Sociétés Plurielles réunit plus d'une cinquantaine de chercheurs en sciences humaines et sociales pour réfléchir à la pluralité de nos sociétés.

13/09/2017

Partenariat National University of Singapor (NUS) & Sociétés plurielles (USPC)
http://societesplurielles.fr/partenariat-national-university-of-singapor-nus-societes-plurielles-uspc/

USPC-NUS Joint Research Projects

Plusieurs chercheurs du programme de recherche Sociétés plurielles sont lauréats de l’appel à projet commun de l’Université Sorbonne Paris Cité (USPC) et de la National University of Singapore (NUS) dont l’objectif est une collaboration scientifique et académique:

Intersecting Mobilities: Southeast Asia from the perspective of Religious Circulation
Researcher in charge of this project: Hui-yeon KIM (INALCO, Asies)
This project aims to combine the strengths of NUS and USPC in the area of religious studies in Southeast Asia to set the groundwork to develop an international collaboration with local academic research institutions. Our objective is to examine the intersections that can bring together the individual interests of scholars working on issue of religious mobility in Asia, in order to establish an academic network that will enable us to collaborate on research projects and funding proposals, as well as on joint publications and conferences. Focusing on the diverse ways in which religious ideas, practices and objects circulate in the region, our initiative emphasizes how technologies of mobility and networks that enable circulation contribute to the shaping of religious communities.
With this joint research initiative, we aim to develop a strong partnership with the Institute of Ethnic Studies (KITA) of the National University of Malaysia (UKM) and IRASEC (Bangkok)/Chiang-Mai University (CMU), Thailand, that will enable us to broaden the reach of our network by incorporating local scholars and institutions. Doing this, we hope to bring universities like NUS and USPC into closer interaction with regional players. Our guiding research question asks how can religious mobility – approached from perspectives originating in the study of different Asian religious traditions and from a variety of disciplinary backgrounds – offer new ways of imagining human and material religious circulation across Asia. By directing our research lens toward aspects of mobility and materiality, we propose an innovative and dynamic approach to the study of religion in Southeast Asia that interrogates conventional models focused on unidirectional flows between center and periphery, as well as patterns that conceive of stability as norm vs. movement as exception. Our ultimate goal is to generate a lasting partnership between the institutions and between individual scholars. To do this, we hope to offer an interdisciplinary space to envision long-term and creative collaborations in the field of religion and mobility.
* USPC-NUS funding approved by USPC and NUS, at the maximum

grant amount of 12 800 € and 19 300 SGD, according with the budget submitted in the project.

13/09/2017

Décès d'Anne-Marie Le Gloannec
http://societesplurielles.fr/deces-danne-marie-le-gloannec/

Nous avons la grande tristesse d’annoncer la disparition de notre collègue Anne-Marie Le Gloannec, membre de notre programme de recherche depuis sa création.
Anne-Marie Le Gloannec, directrice de recherche au Centre de Recherches Internationales (Sciences Po) est partie trop tôt le 26 avril 2017. Son parcours professionnel est à l’image de sa personnalité, brillante, pleine d’énergie, engagée pour l’Europe. Spécialiste de l’Allemagne et plus largement de l’Europe, ces travaux ont porté sur l’Allemagne et le monde, la sécurité européenne et les débats transatlantiques ainsi que sur les politiques étrangères européennes. Son dernier ouvrage « Continent by Default. The European Union and the Demise of Regional Order », paraîtra à l’automne 2017 à Cornell University Press. Elle jouissait d’une grande notoriété internationale. Professeur invité dans de nombreuses universités étrangères, elle avait notamment été directrice adjointe du centre Marc Bloch. Elle a rejoint le programme Sociétés plurielles dès son lancement, contribuant avec clarté et esprit constructif aux discussions sur la gouvernance. Sa contribution au groupe Pluralismes politiques a été décisive pour le succès du colloque international Helsinki 40 Years After: International Reordering and Societal Change 1975-1990 en décembre 2015.
Frédéric Bozo, Sophie Cœuré et Anne de Tinguy pour Sociétés plurielles

05/09/2017

Religious Mobilities in Asia: New networks for New Religious Spaces?
http://societesplurielles.fr/religious-mobilities-in-asia-new-networks-for-new-religious-spaces/

Religious Mobilities in Asia: New networks for New Religious Spaces ?
Workshop
11-12 September 2017
Inalco, 65 rue des Grands Moulins 75013 Paris
Convenors:� Hui Yeon KIM (Assoc. Prof. Inalco, Paris)�, Claire TRAN (Director, Irasec, Bangkok)�, Florence GALMICHE (Assoc. Prof. Paris Diderot, Paris), �Zhe JI (Assoc. Prof. Inalco, Paris)
The concept of mobility has emerged as a new framework that challenges the sedentary and territorial precepts of twentieth century social sciences (Urry 2006; Sheller 2011; Chu 2010; Basu & Coleman 2008). From a traditional social scientific perspective, travel has largely operated as a black box, a neutral set of technologies and processes predominantly permitting forms of economic, social and political life that are seen as explicable in terms of other, more causally powerful processes (Urry 2006, 4). The emerging literature in Mobilities challenges this model by focusing on how material and human circulation interact with the technologies that make it possible. A focus on mobility problematizes models that see stability and place as the ‘natural’, anchored state of things and mobility as the exception. Moreover, movement and flux cannot be exclusively related to globalization and postmodernity, they need to account for other dynamics that shape the material world.
The growing body of academic work emerging from the Mobilities paradigm has mainly concentrated on labor and financial flows, and to a lesser extent on the circulation of entertainment, consumer products and social remittances. Through this workshop, we aim to bring the methodological insights and conceptual developments proposed from the Mobilities literature, to shed light on the embodied and material aspects of religious circulation.
Research focused on circulation in the context of pilgrimage, missionary work and scriptural texts has acknowledged the material, financial and cultural aspects of these movements, yet they have mainly approached them as byproducts of what is considered ‘religious circulation’ proper. Our initiative challenges the hierarchical subordination of material religion to the preeminence of scriptures and pilgrimage, and aims to look at religious objects and the world they create when circulating across Asia.
Our workshop also emphasizes the importance of exploring the material dynamics of religious networks in the region, stressing the interplay between the technological, economic and political dimensions of circulation and the changing shapes of religious networks (Vasquez 2011). Intersecting mobilities produce new patterns of interaction where networks redefine arrangements of economic, social and religious life. As Urry remarks, there is no increase in mobility without extensive systems of immobility. Airports, roads and factories are preeminent examples of this, but so are temples, seminaries and monasteries.
Furthermore, immobility is not only a technical requirement of contemporary networks, but also a consequence of global political dynamics. While certain religious denominations capitalize on their ideological alignment with neo-liberalism and market capitalism to enhance their reach and flexibility, others are rendered immobile and increasingly restricted for not embracing specific notions of gender equality, democracy or political liberalism.
We also suggest the importance of thinking about religious circulation between Asia and the West in a postcolonial context. While until half a century ago, flows of religious tradition and practice were mostly a product of Christian missionary projects and their quest to bring Christianity to Asia, contemporary flows are not limited to Christianity and are no longer unidirectional. For example, the circulation of lay Asian Christians and the new networks that they build between Asia and the West need to be considered as a response to political and economic challenges of globalization and transnational migration; likewise, the mobile regimes that connect Chinese Protestant pastors, knowledge, norms and capital at an international level, provide a fundamental assemblage for the creation of new networks of Chinese Protestants in France.
Our objective is to focus on different types of movements that are constitutive of diasporic religions and transnational religious traditions: e.g. the circulation of ritual specialists, ritual objects, deities, foods, medicine, educators, literature, missionaries, activists, finance/informal economies. Likewise, we examine the role played by immobile ‘nodes’ in channeling flows of people, distributing goods and services, and concentrating intellectual resources arriving from diverse points of origin.
The purpose of this workshop is to explore different types of mobility within the region and in/out the region. We propose that the material aspects of how religious mobility happens have been overlooked, and that a recalibration of our research lens towards materiality can offer new insights into how diasporic religion is formed, as well as undermine the perception of stability in the relationship between religious centers and their (formerly) fixed points of destination.
Some important questions that this initiative will address include:

How do patterns of religious travel (missionary, educational, pilgrimage, activist, etc.) and the circulation of religious symbols and objects connect diasporic/transnational networks?
What is the impact of new media on religious circulation and how do technological developments transform conceptions of space?
How do religious networks help actors negotiate tensions between multiple moral responsibilities?
In the context of increased mobility (for some), what are the consequences of immobility in its restrictive dimensions?
What is the importance of immobile religious nodes as key to distribute flows of people, information and objects?
How do notions of nostalgia figure in projects of religious imaginaries?
How are contemporary ‘anti-global’ concerns manifested in material aspects of religious circulation?
How are national religious elites in Asia integrated with transnational networks of scholars and religious specialists?

Workshop Religious mobilities: New Networks for New Religious Spaces?

21/07/2017

Yasser Elsheshtawy: Visiting professor in Paris in October
http://societesplurielles.fr/yasser-elsheshtawy-visiting-professor-in-paris-in-october/

Yasser Elsheshtawy will be our guest in Paris in October.

Yasser Elsheshtawy is a Professor of Architecture specializing in urban research in the Middle East. His scholarship focuses on urbanization in developing societies, informal urbanism, urban history and environment-behavior studies. In addition to teaching at United Arab Emirates University he was appointed as the curator for the UAE Pavilion at the 15th Venice Architecture Biennale in 2016. He authored a series of books and publications including “Dubai: Behind an urban spectacle.” His blog dubaization has been hailed by The Guardian as one of the notable city blogs in the world. Elsheshtawy is currently working on a book about the Arab Gulf City provisionally titled: “Temporary Cities.”

04/07/2017

Séminaire MAGMET avec Ash Amin
http://societesplurielles.fr/seminaire-magmet-avec-ash-amin/

Séminaire MAGMET : Seeing Like A City avec Ash Amin.

Discutant: Patrick Le Galès CNRS Director of Research / Directeur de recherches CNRS, Dean of Urban School/Directeur de l’Ecole Urbaine (en anglais)

Ash Amin is Professor and Head of Geography at the University of Cambridge. He is also Foreign Secretary and Vice president at the British Academy. He writes about race, belonging, cities and political renewal. His latest books are Land of Strangers (Polity, 2012), Arts of the Political (Duke, 2013, with Nigel Thrift), Seeing Like a City (Polity, 2017, with Nigel Thrift), and European Union and Disunion: Reflections on European Identity (British Academy, 2017, co-edited with Philip Lewis). He is currently working on a project on mental health and the metropolis, led by Nick Manning at King’s College London.

13/06/2017

Migrants in Global Cities: Experiences from Asia, Europe and the Middle East
http://societesplurielles.fr/migrants-in-global-cities-experiences-from-asia-europe-and-the-middle-east/

Migrants in Global Cities: Experiences from Asia, Europe and the Middle East
This international collaborative workshop is convened by the National University of Singapore (Asia Research Institute) and the Université Sorbonne Paris Cité (USPC)’s interdisciplinary program Sociétés Plurielles (Diverse Societies). It aims to bring together scholars working on Asia, the Middle East and Europe with respect to questions of global city making, migration diversity and cosmopolitan urbanities. This collaboration will enrich the understanding of global city-making processes by emphasizing the role played by international migration. It will also develop a comparative and interdisciplinary perspective on how migration impacts cities in the regions mentioned. Questions it seeks to address are:

How are they linked through flows of migrants and what motivates the direction of various flows?
How are these cities connected with and embedded within migrant transnational networks?
What are the benefits of approaching regionally specific happenings in a comparative perspective?


Organizers:
Michiel Baas – arimba@nus.edu.sg
Brenda Yeoh – geoysa@nus.edu.sg
Delphine Pagès-El Karoui – d.pageselkaroui@googlemail.com

23/05/2017

N°1 de la r***e Sociétés plurielles "Les sciences sociales et humaines à l'épreuve de l'événement"
http://societesplurielles.fr/n1-de-la-r***e-societes-plurielles-les-sciences-sociales-et-humaines-a-lepreuve-de-levenement/

Le premier numéro de la r***e numérique Sociétés plurielles, intitulé Les sciences humaines et sociales à l’épreuve de l’événement est en ligne sur la plateforme Episcience.org à l’adresse suivante: http://societes-plurielles.episciences.org/

17/05/2017

Le communisme revisité
http://societesplurielles.fr/le-communisme-revisite/

Journée d’étude organisée dans le cadre du séminaire « Expériences socialistes »
de 10h à 17h à l’Université Paris Diderot, bâtiment Olympe de Gouges, 8ème étage, salle 870.

Bernard Chavance (Université Paris Diderot, LADYSS) : Le modèle marxien du communisme et sa critique

Kostas Lambropoulos (Research Institute for European and American Studies) : From (failed) Communism to (feasible) Socialism.

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