April 24, 2025

Authoritarian Times: Crisis and Utopia

   6:30 pm – 9:00 pm

     Buenos Aires

   Free event

A panel discussion with Zeynep Gambetti (Istanbul), Rosaura Martínez (México), Daniel Loick (Amsterdam) and Paula Biglieri (Buenos Aires), moderated by Gisela Catanzaro (Buenos Aires)

Location: Centro Cultural de la Cooperación Floreal Gorini, Av. Corrientes 1543, Sala Laks (3rd Floor), Buenos Aires, Argentina

New authoritarianisms are often taken to emerge in a time of crisis. However, beyond indicating an uncertain future, the precise conditions of this crisis often remain elusive. Questioning the relationship between the crisis of the temporal regime of modernity and the new authoritarianisms, this panel will simultaneously promote a discussion on what is new about these authoritarianisms, and also on the very diagnosis of our present as an era emptied of images of the future. Analyzing the transformations of temporal regimes in their heterogeneity, as well as their relationships with other material and symbolic crises, the panel will seek to address the contradictory aspects of our time on a double level: On the one hand, it seeks to question the meanings of the current crisis: How can this crisis be thought and how does it relate to what authoritarianism does to time? On the other hand, a series of questions related to the challenges of political struggle impose themselves: what openings, if any, for emancipatory responses to authoritarianism does the crisis of historical time bring about?

Paula Biglieri is an independent researcher at the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET) and co-organiser of Cátedra Libre Ernesto Laclau at the University of Buenos Aires. Zeynep Gambetti is an independent researcher in political theory, based in Istanbul, and co-chair of the board of the International Consortium of Critical Theory Programs. Daniel Loick is associate professor of political and social philosophy at the University of Amsterdam and principal investigator of Emergencies of Authoritarianism as well as of a research project on Abolition Democracy. Rosaura Martínez Ruiz is Professor of Philosophy at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and a member of the National System of Researchers (Mexico),Gisela Catanzaro is professor of political science and sociology at the University of Buenos Aires and independent researcher at CONICET.

Gambetti, Loick, Martínez Ruiz and Catanzaro are members of the research project “Emergencies of Authoritarianism,” an initiative of the International Consortium of Critical Theory Programs funded by the Volkswagen Stiftung (Germany). This event is co-organized by the ICCTP, the Centro Cultural de la Cooperación Floreal Gorini, and the Instituto de Investigaciones Gino Germani at the University of Buenos Aires.

past

October 18, 2024

Emergencies of Authoritarianism: Global Entanglements

A panel discussion with Debaditya Bhattacharya (Delhi), Gisela Catanzaro (Buenos Aires), Zeynep Gambetti (Istanbul), Eva von Redecker (Berlin), moderated by Daniel Loick (Amsterdam). 18.10.2024, SPUI25, Amsterdam.

Authoritarian, right-wing populist, and fascist tendencies are currently gaining strength all over the world. But how do different instantiations of authoritarianism relate to each other? It is clear that methodological nationalism cannot account for the mimetic resurfacing of memes, electoral strategies, and administrative maneuvers in hitherto unconnected parts of the globe. But the well-rehearsed dialectic between the local and the global does not capture the phenomenon either: specific forms of authoritarianism are neither local phenomena that become interconnected only ex post facto, nor are they simply local manifestations of a global phenomenon. Rather, the heterogeneous emergencies of authoritarianism are transversal, interacting with, inspiring, and challenging each other in complex ways, not without maintaining their respective specific national and regional frontlines. The participants of this panel discussion will shed light on the global entanglements of authoritarianism based on their specific local experiences and situated knowledge. What are some of the main characteristics of authoritarianism today? How are its different variations connected with each other? How are they dependent on other global developments? What are useful theoretical concepts to analyze, criticize and effectively respond to authoritarianism?

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