New York Seminar & Conference Center, 71 W 23rd St
Friday, June 14
Registration: 09:00-9:30
Session 1: 9:30-11:00
Marina Ludwigs (Stockholm University), “Hierarchical thinking, grammatical structures, and the originary scene”
Andrew Bartlett (Kwantlen Polytechnic Univrsity), “Toward a Minimal Model of Human Fear”
Matthew Schneider (High Point University), “Metaphysical Desire Revisited: The Case of Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria”
Session 2: 11:15-12:45
Joel Davis (Independent Scholar), “Hyperspherical Aperspectivity – The Emergent Frontier of Moral Innovation”
Adam Katz (Quinnipiac University), “The Linguistic Turn and Generative Literacy”
Moritz Bierling (Independent Scholar), “State of (the) Communion: After the Victimary Paradigm”
Lunch: 12:45-1:45
Session 3: 2-3:30
Magdalena Zlocka-Dabrowska (Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University), “Generative Anthropology and the Scene of Origin as a ‘Turn to Humanity’”
Lucius Redmond (Independent Scholar), “Completing the Linguistic Turn”
Matthew Taylor (Kinjo Gakuin University), “Beholding the Beholder’s Eye: Beauty and Mimetic Effects in Jane Austen”
Session 4: 3:45-5:15
Eric Gans (UCLA), “The Deferral of Violence Through Representation: Why We Need the Origin of Language”
Evening: Optional Restaurant Dinner – Location TBA
Saturday, June 15
Session 5: 9:30-11:00
Dominic Mitchell (University of Bath), “Difference and Deferral in the World of STEM”
Sandor Goodhart (Purdue University), “Turning and Turning: René Girard, Eric Gans, Language and Representation”
Ken Mayers (Independent Scholar), “Linguistic Turners at the Mad Tea Party”
Session 6: 11:15-12:45
Martin Fashbaugh (Black Hills State University), Language, Culture, Banality, and Resentment: The “Re-Turn” from the Linguistic in Robert Louis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Lahoucine Ouzgane (University of Alberta), “The limitations of identity politics in Leila Slimani’s Chanson douce”
Benjamin Barber (United International College), “The Legacy of Bataille’s Ostensive towards Totality and the Posthumanist Anti-Linguistic Turn”
Lunch: 12:45-1:45
Session 7: 2-3:30
Andrew McKenna (Loyola University Chicago), “Shakespeare’s Linguistic Turn in King Lear”
Richard van Oort (University of Victoria), “Shakespeare’s Heroines: The Constancy of Love”
Ian Dennis (University of Ottawa), “’Bonnie and Clyde’ and ‘The Highwaymen’: Cinematic Resentment and Cinematic History”
Session 8: 3:45-5:15
Final Roundtable Discussion
Generative Anthropology Society Business Meeting