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2024: Decadence and War

Decadence and War

Decadence and War: Crisis, Chaos, and Culture Wars

Goldsmiths, University of London

Postponed

It is with a heavy heart that we have postponed our upcoming symposium, ‘Decadence and War: Crisis, Chaos, and Culture Wars’.

Goldsmiths is set to push ahead with over 130 academic redundancies. Departments that are ‘in scope’ for redundancy include the two Departments that run the Decadence Research Centre: English and Creative Writing, and Theatre and Performance. Staff in the affected departments will most likely be asked to re-apply for their jobs in June, with an eye on reducing staffing.

In response to these circumstances, the Union has voted to escalate Action Short of a Strike to a full strike scheduled for the last two weeks of June. This does not impact 13 June; however, it would not seem appropriate to hold this event on campus at Goldsmiths right now, and unfortunately the alternative, off-campus venue we were planning for has since fallen through. Sadly, this forces our hand.

Please accept our sincere apologies for any inconvenience caused.

The irony is that the culture wars have played no small part in the issues currently facing the study of arts and humanities subjects in the UK. As such, we sincerely hope you will be able to join us once we’ve settled upon a date for postponement in the next academic year, by which time, we hope, it will once again be feasible to run it.


Call for Papers

Decadence prowls in the shadows of war, and exposes its contradictions. As a byword for decline, decadence is that which war is supposed to overcome. The destructive force of war empowers those who wage it, and is often seen as a corrective, in the eyes of protagonists, to the weakened moral backbone of a beleaguered nation. Decadence and adjacent concepts are routinely deployed in rhetoric intended to stoke the flames of less bloody but nonetheless aggressive ‘culture wars’ – be it in the condemnation of artists like Ron Athey on the floor of the US Senate (‘Congressional Record’, 1994), or in the grandstanding of politicians like Oliver Dowden, who, in February 2022 while serving as Co-Chairman of the Conservative Party in Britain, vilified the propagation of so-called ‘woke ideology’ as ‘a dangerous form of decadence’.

Chaos, conflict, and political antagonism on the global stage are perennial issues, but in recent months, in the wake of geopolitical crises, bloodshed at borders, and the unhappy renaissance of culture wars ahead of election campaigns, such turmoil appears to have reached fever pitch. What, then, might decadence have to offer to our understanding of the interplay between different kinds of conflict? How do armed conflicts play into the rhetoric of those looking to manufacture a culture war for political gain, and how might the waging of culture wars inform attempts to justify armed conflicts?    

We invite contributors to respond to these questions and contexts – and those of their own suggestion – in a one-day symposium co-organised by the аĿª½± (аĿª½±) and the Decadence Research Centre (DRC) at Goldsmiths, University of London. We encourage proposals considering diverse forms of cultural expression including literature, poetry, theatre, live art, dance, film, music, and visual and material cultures, as well as a range of geographical and historical contexts, from antiquity to the present.

We welcome both conventional and unconventional presentation formats, including 20-minute papers, performance lectures, screenings, and panel proposals. The symposium will also include a roundtable discussion for which we invite 5-minute provocations that will serve as points of departure for discussion and debate. Abstracts of 300 words for papers and panels (and of 150 words for provocations) plus a brief biography should be sent to drc@gold.ac.uk by 25 March 2024.

 

Detail from Maxwell Armfield’s pictorial commentary to Vernon Lee, The Ballet of the Nations (1915)


Location

Goldsmiths is located in New Cross, South East London.

It is a short walk from both New Cross Gate and New Cross stations (Zone 2) on the main rail network and London overground; about a 7 minute journey from London Bridge and 30 minutes from London Victoria. It is on bus routes 21, 36, 53, 136, 171, 172, 177, 225, 321, 343, 436, 453.

For exact directions to Goldsmiths please see the  page on the Goldsmiths website.


Contact Us

Please email drc@gold.ac.uk with any queries about Decadence and War.

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Conference Organisers

Adam Alston (Goldsmiths, University of London)

Alice Condé (Goldsmiths, University of London)

Jane Desmarais (Goldsmiths, University of London)

Jessica Gossling (Goldsmiths, University of London)