Northwestern University, Department of Anthropology, Anthropology Building, Seminar Room 104, 1810 Hinman Avenue, Evanston, Illinois, USA, 22 February 2010, 3.00 pm
Jessica Greenberg: "After the Revolution: Youth, Democracy and the Politics of Disappointment in Postsocialist Serbia"
Abstract: "On October 5, 2000 the citizens of Serbia staged a mass democratic revolution on the streets of Belgrade. Hundreds of thousands of people poured into the capital demanding in signs, songs, whistles and chants that Slobodan Milošević accept electoral defeat and step down as the country's leader. Democratic activists, opposition leaders, and students had overcome ten long years of authoritarian control of government and media to bring democracy to Serbia. In the years leading up to the revolution, student democratic activists became a symbol of hope, courage and energy in Serbia and internationally. October 5th marked both the high point and the end of the love affair with these young revolutionaries.
"Two years later, when I began my research with student activists, their image had been tarnished. Former opposition members, government ministers, and media figures dismissed student groups as at best irritating and at worst corrupt. For many people, inside and outside the country, Serbia's revolutionary tale was one of hope turned to disappointment, promise to failure. In narrating their hopes for a democratic future, people had drawn on the images and discourses of youth protest. 'After the Revolution' traces the history and significance of revolutionary and post-revolutionary political expectations in order to demonstrate how disappointment shapes Serbia's emerging democracy.
"Democratic failure in Serbia was produced when both local and international actors judged post-revolutionary democracy in terms of expectations generated in the crucible of the student-led revolution. Democratic youth revolutionaries promised positive political transformation and a more hopeful future for Serbian citizens. But actual democracy delivered poverty, social unrest and factional struggle. I will demonstrate how youth and student activists have become metonymic for the movement from hope to disappointment in newly democratic Serbia."
Followed by a reception. All are welcome.
Jessica Greenberg is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Communication Studies at Northwestern University.
Showing posts with label seminar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seminar. Show all posts
16 February 2010
10 January 2010
Seminar: Anti-democratic Voices in Ancient Greece and Rome (and their Legacies)
"History of Political Ideas" seminar, Institute of Historical Research (part of the School of Advanced Study, University of London), Senate House, Room G35, South Block, Malet Street, London, WC1E 7HU,
3 March 2010, 5-7 pm
Janet Coleman: "Anti-democratic Voices in Ancient Greece and Rome (and their Legacies)"
Abstract: "Professor Coleman will discuss anti-democratic arguments found in the literature of ancient Greece and Rome, to illustrate the ever-present voices of potentially or actually dispossessed elites and their attitudes to 'ordinary minds'. Beginning with what we today take equality and democracy to mean, she seeks to demonstrate the uniqueness of what Athens had as democratic with its rather startling view of the political AS emotional. She will contrast this with Roman republican and imperial attitudes to the emotions, especially as influenced by Stoic philosophy, and with reference to their views of the emotionally undisciplined mob. Developing an argument that distinguishes between social free speech and political free speech, she wants to indicate that we owe more to the Romans than to the Greeks in that we have kept alive some of the most prominent anti-democratic voices of that ancient past, in our own." (sourced from a seminar of the same title given at NYU on 17 September 2009)
Janet Coleman is Professor of Ancient and Medieval Political Thought at the London School of Economics and Global Distinguished Professor at New York University.
P.S. The announcement mentions both Room G35, South Block, and the Low Countries Room, North Block, as venue. Check for updates here:
www.history.ac.uk/events/browse/seminars/6483
3 March 2010, 5-7 pm
Janet Coleman: "Anti-democratic Voices in Ancient Greece and Rome (and their Legacies)"
Abstract: "Professor Coleman will discuss anti-democratic arguments found in the literature of ancient Greece and Rome, to illustrate the ever-present voices of potentially or actually dispossessed elites and their attitudes to 'ordinary minds'. Beginning with what we today take equality and democracy to mean, she seeks to demonstrate the uniqueness of what Athens had as democratic with its rather startling view of the political AS emotional. She will contrast this with Roman republican and imperial attitudes to the emotions, especially as influenced by Stoic philosophy, and with reference to their views of the emotionally undisciplined mob. Developing an argument that distinguishes between social free speech and political free speech, she wants to indicate that we owe more to the Romans than to the Greeks in that we have kept alive some of the most prominent anti-democratic voices of that ancient past, in our own." (sourced from a seminar of the same title given at NYU on 17 September 2009)
Janet Coleman is Professor of Ancient and Medieval Political Thought at the London School of Economics and Global Distinguished Professor at New York University.
P.S. The announcement mentions both Room G35, South Block, and the Low Countries Room, North Block, as venue. Check for updates here:
www.history.ac.uk/events/browse/seminars/6483
Labels:
anti-democratic thought,
Athens,
classical studies,
Rome,
seminar
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