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Tag Archives: Pierre-François Noppen

10th Meeting Recap

03 Wednesday Jul 2024

Posted by Pierre-François Noppen in Association for Adorno Studies, Conference Summary

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Agnès Grivaux, Alexandra Colligs, Anders Bartonek, Anke Devyver, Anne-Gaëlle Bled, Annette de Moura, Aurelia Peyrical, Bruno Carvalho, Cassandre Caballero, Delia Popa, Ed Graham, Emmanuel Nardon, Estelle Ferrarese, Frederico Lyra, Gordon Finlayson, Iaan Reynolds, Jean-Baptiste Vuillerod, Jessica Feely, Karin Stögner, Katia Genel, Lea Gekle, Louis Hartnoll, Marie Loslier Simon, Paul Dablemont, Peter Dews, Peter E. Gordon, Pierre-François Noppen, Plamen Andreev, Raffaele Carbone, Salima Naït Ahmed, Surti Singh, Vincent Chanson, Vladimir Safatle, William Ross, Yasmin Afshar

As the readers of this blog know, the 10th meeting of the Association for Adorno Studies was held on May 30-31. The event took place on the beautiful “Pôle Citadelle” campus of the Université de Picardie Jules Verne, in Amiens, France. We owe the stunning design of the campus to the Italian architect Renzo Piano (see pictures below).

Our very heartfelt thanks go to Estelle Ferrarese and her team: Anne-Gaëlle Bled, Cassandre Caballero, Lea Gekle, Frederico Lyra, Annette de Moura and Salima Naït Ahmed, for the amazing work they did on planning and organizing this very successful meeting. This year the program was organized around a very timely theme in Adorno studies: “History and Social Theory”. It brought together a host of excellent scholars, several of whom are emerging scholars or new to the Association. Our thanks to all the presenters for their very thought-provoking and high-caliber papers on various aspects of Adorno’s views on the theme and to all the other participants who chaired sessions and partook in the lively discussions throughout the event. We counted participants from France, Italy, Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden, Brazil, the UK, Canada and the US at this event.

As is our custom, the business meeting was held on the second day at lunch time. The main order of business was the election of a new executive. I am thrilled to announce that William Ross has accepted the role of President and Paul Dablemont that of Vice-President for a term of 3 years. Let us all thank them for their commitment to the AAS, congratulate them very warmly on their nomination and wish them the best for a very successful tenure!

Three other points of business are worth highlighting:

First, the Harvard meeting (to be hosted by Peter Gordon) has been pushed to the spring of 2026. William and Paul have been at work on a plan for 2025. They will be in touch with news about it over the summer.

Second, you can now forward information to be posted on the blog directly to William and Paul (follow the links above). They will be taking over the administration of this blog (at least until further notice).

Third, stay tuned for news about the relaunch of our journal, Adorno Studies, at Mimesis Press. It promises much!

I attach some pictures that document the event. They include pictures of the enchanting floating gardens (The Hortillonnages), a tour of which Estelle and her team had the marvellous idea to organize for us.

Recap of the 9th Annual Meeting

12 Monday Jun 2023

Posted by Pierre-François Noppen in Association for Adorno Studies, Conference Summary

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Adorno Studies, Adriano Lotito, Annual Meeting, Antonia Hofstätter, Bruno Carvalho, Centre for Social and Political Thought, Emily Shyr, Estelle Ferrarese, Fumi Okiji, Gordon Finlayson, Han-Gyeol Lie, Iain Macdonald, Jacob Bard-Rosenberg, Jessica Daboin, Kathy Kiloh, Lars Rensmann, Lydia Goehr, Marina Lademacher, Nick Walker, Peter E. Gordon, Pierre-François Noppen, Salima Naït Ahmed, Surti Singh, Taylor Carman, Theodor W. Adorno, Toby Lovat, University of Sussex

The 9th annual meeting of the Association for Adorno Studies took place in the beautiful coastal city of Brighton, UK, in early May. The meeting was held over two days in the venues of the Leonardo Hotel (May 5th: Brighton Station; May 6th: Brighton Waterfront). It was the first time since 2019 that the AAS was able to hold its annual meeting. It was very exciting to reconnect in person and to see so many new speakers and participants join our adventure.

Our thanks go to the Centre for Social and Political Thought of the University of Sussex for hosting the event. A very special thanks to Gordon Finlayson and Marina Lademacher for all the work they invested in organizing this wonderful event with such a stimulating and high-calibre program! The meeting was very well attended (we counted over 45 participants) and convened speakers and participants from several countries, including the US, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Greece and Brazil. Amongst other things, this year’s program offered a concentration of remarkable papers on Adorno’s aesthetics and philosophy of music, which made for a very sustained and thought-provoking conversation over two days. The last day ended with a much-anticipated author-meet-critics panel devoted to Iain Macdonald’s What Would Be Different. Thanks to Taylor Carman, Peter E. Gordon, Iain Macdonald and Nick Walker for the fascinating exchanges!

We held our business meeting on the second day of the event at lunch time, as is our custom. While members of the AAS met a number of times more or less informally during our pandemic hiatus, this was our first formal business meeting since 2019. Surti Singh (President) and Pierre-Francois Noppen (Vice-President) co-chaired the meeting. They shared news about recent developments in the AAS and submitted a number of points for discussion. Significant changes have happened over the last three years. And we have many people to thank for their help and their efforts in making these changes possible. Here’s an overview:

First, Martin Shuster and Kathy Kiloh (founders of the AAS, former President and Vice-President of the AAS, respectively, as well as founders and editors Adorno Studies since its inception) stepped down from the journal in 2021. We owe an enormous debt of gratitude to both of them for their long and dedicated service and their extraordinary commitment to the AAS. Since then, a new editorial team has formed (Samir Gandesha, Johan Hartle, Antonia Hofstätter, Han-Gyeol Lie and Stefano Marino) along with a new editorial board. The new editors have been very busy preparing the relaunch of Adorno Studies at Mimesis Press. Antonia Hofstätter, who was present at the meeting, relayed some very exciting news (and shared some visuals!) about the next issue. Stay tuned! The event will be publicized on this blog.

Second, the AAS has been working on the transfer of this blog to a new server at UC Berkeley (thanks to Robert Kaufmann, Debarati Sanyal and Dan Blanton). The details should be announced soon. In the meantime, if you wish to be added on the mailing list of this blog, please contact Pierre-François Noppen directly (pf.noppen@usask.ca).

Third, we have announced that our executive is to be renewed at our 2024 meeting. It is worth noting that, on the model we agreed upon in 2012 at our first meeting (Johns Hopkins University), members of our executive serve three-year terms. While the pandemic upset our plans for a renewal of the executive, we are pleased to return to our pre-pandemic model with three-year commitments.

Fourth, we discussed a number of options for next year’s meeting (2024). The location will be announced by the end of the summer on this blog. We are also thrilled to announce that Peter E. Gordon has very graciously agreed to host our 2025 meeting at Harvard University.

All of this bodes very well for the future of the AAS!

Here’s the complete schedule of this year’s meeting.

And here are some pictures that were shared with us:

New Book: Théorie critique de la propagande

24 Thursday Jun 2021

Posted by Pierre-François Noppen in Critical Theory, Frankfurt School, Publications, Theodor W. Adorno, Uncategorized

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Agnès Grivaux, Ernst Bloch, Frankfurt School, Gérard Raulet, Hans J. Lind, John Abromeit, Léa Barbisan, Lucien Pelletier, Olivier Agard, Patrick Vassort, Pierre Arnoux, Pierre-François Noppen, Propaganda, Siegfried Kracauer, Stephanie Baumann, Vladimir Safatle, William Ross

Here’s some belated promotion for a collection that Gérard Raulet and myself edited. The collection is entitled Théorie critique de la propagande (Critical Theory of Propaganda, Éditions la Maison des sciences de l’homme). It came out late in the fall and it could be of interest to some of our readers.

Here’s a link to the publisher’s page and to the OpenEdition platform where the individual contributions can be found.

I translate the short blurb: 

The studies collected in this volume echo the rediscovery of Siegfried Kracauer’s manuscript entitled Totalitarian Propaganda (Totalitäre Propaganda, 1937-1938). Their aim is both exegetical and political. On the one side, they shed light on an important moment of the Frankfurt School’s Critical Theory, namely the debate on mass culture and propaganda that animated the German exiles in the 1930s and 1940s. On the other, they articulate what motivated these thinkers in order to elaborate a critical theory of propaganda that would live up to the challenges of the present. The topics they debated, such as the authoritarian excesses of liberalism, the manipulation of the masses and the media construction of the real, remain very actual. 

Contributions: 

Introduction, by Pierre-François Noppen and Gérard Raulet

Patrick Vassort, L’art politique examiné par la Théorie critique

Gérard Raulet, La théorie de la propagande dans son contexte: les réflexions de la Théorie critique sur le fascisme pendant l’exil

Olivier Agard, Convergences et divergences avec l’Institut für Sozialforschung dans La propagande totalitaire de Siegfried Kracauer (1937-1938)

Hans J. Lind, A cacophony of critical voices? Excavating the palimpsest of Siegfried Kracauer’s 1937-1938 study on fascist propaganda

Stephanie Baumann, Des nouvelles masse à l’ornement totalitaire: Siegfried Kracauer sur la propagande nazie

Vladimir Safatle, The fascist laugh: propaganda and cynical rationality in Adorno

Agnès Grivaux, Manipulation des masses et propagande fasciste chez Horkheimer et Adorno: esquisse d’une théorie psychanalytique du jugement

Lucien Pelletier, Militantisme, propagande et métaphysique: pour introduire à la “Critique de la propagande” d’Ernst Bloch

Ernst Bloch, Critique de la propagande

Pierre Arnoux, Le pouvoir de la monotonie: Adorno et l’analyse empirique de la culture de masse

William Ross, Current of Music: de la radio courante vers la possibilité qui court dans la radio

Pierre-François Noppen, Le langage des images: schématisme, cinéma et régression chez Adorno

Léa Barbisan, L’”inconscient optique”: plongée dans les “profondeurs de la mentalité collective”

John Abromeit, Siegfried Kracauer and the early Frankfurt school’s analysis of fascism as right-wing populism

Recap of the 8th Annual Meeting

03 Thursday Oct 2019

Posted by Surti Singh in Association for Adorno Studies, Conference Summary

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Annual Meeting, Association for Adorno Studies, Eduardo Socha, Fabian Freyenhagen, Henry Pickford, Iain Macdonald, João Pedro Cachopo, Luiz Repa, Pierre-François Noppen, Recap, Robert Kaufman, Rodrigo Duarte, Surti Singh, Timo Jütten, University of São Paulo, Virginia Ferreira da Costa, Vladimir Safatle

On April 26th and 27th 2019, the Association for Adorno Studies convened its 8th annual meeting at the University of São Paulo’s beautiful campus. The meeting was officially opened with remarks by host Vladimir Safatle, Surti Singh, and Pierre-François Noppen. It was the Association’s first meeting in Latin America and a welcome exposure to Adorno studies in Brazil. The well-attended meeting featured a strong program with speakers from Brazil, Canada, Egypt, Portugal, the United Kingdom, and the United States of America. The papers included excellent engagements with Adorno’s philosophy and aesthetics, as well as timely inquiries into the relevance of Adorno’s thought for current social and political issues. 

Amid threats to academic freedom and invectives against cultural Marxism, our meeting coincided with Bolsonaro’s April 26th announcement on twitter that budgetary cuts would directly target philosophy and sociology. With the humanities facing an uncertain future, and colleagues and students in a dubious position, the meeting embodied a spirit of solidarity. Subsequently, a 30% cut to all university budgets was announced and the situation remains precarious today, with some universities uncertain about how they will conclude their current semesters. 

During our business meeting, held on the second day, we discussed the general aims of the Association, possibilities for publication in the Association’s journal, Adorno Studies, plans for next year’s meeting with several options in Europe, and the future possibility of returning to Latin America.

On behalf of the entire Association, we’d like to extend our heartfelt thanks to Vladimir Safatle and Eduardo Socha for being such generous hosts, navigating us through the fascinating city of São Paulo, and for all their work and organization into making this yet another successful and productive meeting. 

For more information about cuts to education in Brazil, Vladimir Safatle’s article is here: https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/brazils-conservative-revolution/.

And here are some photos of the event:

Recap of the 7th Annual Meeting

24 Thursday May 2018

Posted by Pierre-François Noppen in Association for Adorno Studies, Conference, Theodor W. Adorno

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American University in Cairo, Annual Meeting, Association for Adorno Studies, Kathy Kiloh, Mae Saafan, Martin Shuster, Pierre-François Noppen, Recap, Reham Mohammed El Morally, Robert Switzer, Roger Foster, Surti Singh, Tahrir Square Campus, Theodor W. Adorno, William Ross

Earlier this month (May 4-5, 2018), members of the Association for Adorno Studies gathered at the American University in Cairo for our 7th annual meeting. As summer was taking a early start in Egypt – with temperatures surging to 40°C/104°F! – the meeting was held in the sumptuous (and cool) Oriental Hall of the Tahrir Square Campus.

Surti Singh (our host), Robert Switzer (Dean of the School of Humanities and Sciences at AUC) and Pierre-François Noppen (our outgoing President) opened the meeting with remarks. (Our outgoing Vice-President, Roger Foster, couldn’t attend the meeting this year.) Speakers from Canada, the US, Norway, France, Brasil and Egypt were invited to present their latest work on Adorno. The sharp, insightful and thought-provoking papers fueled open and very stimulating discussions throughout the meeting. Continue reading →

Recap of the 6th Annual Meeting

01 Saturday Apr 2017

Posted by Pierre-François Noppen in Association for Adorno Studies, Conference, Theodor W. Adorno

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Annual Meeting, Espen Hammer, Gordon Finlayson, Henry Pickford, Iain Macdonald, Joseph Winters, Kathy Kiloh, Martin Shuster, Peter E. Gordon, Pierre-François Noppen, Roger Foster, Theodor W. Adorno, Thomas Manganaro

The 6th annual meeting of the Association for Adorno Studies was held last weekend at Duke University (March 24-25, 2017). As cherry blossoms were bursting in color on Duke’s gorgeous campus, speakers and participants were gathered in the Fredric Jameson Gallery.

The meeting was opened by remarks from Henry Pickford, Joseph Winters, and Pierre-François Noppen. Unfortunately, the Association’s vice-president, Roger Foster, couldn’t attend this year’s meeting due to the restrictions imposed by CUNY on travels to North Carolina in protest against the sex discrimination laws that the North Carolina State legislature has introduced. The meeting was attended by speakers and participants from the United States of America, Canada, the United Kingdom, France, Sweden, Germany, and Austria. The high-caliber papers led to very engaging discussions throughout the meeting. This year’s author-meet-critics panel was devoted to Peter Gordon’s new book, Adorno and Existence (Harvard UP, 2016), which addresses an important weakness in the scholarship, namely Adorno’s repeated confrontation with Kierkegaard, Husserl and Heidegger. It made for a very stimulating exchange between the author and his three respondents, Espen Hammer, Gordon Finlayson and Iain Macdonald. The first day ended with a reception to celebrate the publication of the first volume of Adorno Studies: an interdisciplinary journal. It was also the Association’s way of thanking the editors, Martin Shuster and Kathy Kiloh, for their outstanding work on developing this unique platform.

As is our custom, all were invited to discuss questions relative to the journal and the development of the Association in our annual business meeting (day one, at lunch time). Plans were discussed for next year’s meeting (a number of options are being explored). The location of the meeting will be announced on our website at the end of summer. Once again, we held an informal roundtable discussion on the second day (at lunch time), which focused on the shifts and disruptions in the contemporary political landscape.

On behalf of all the members of the Association, we would like to extend our gratitude to Henry Pickford, and to Thomas Manganaro, who assisted Henry in organizing this most productive and successful event.

Here are a few snapshots of the event.

Change of the executives…

26 Monday Oct 2015

Posted by Martin Shuster in Association for Adorno Studies, General

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Association for Adorno Studies, Pierre-François Noppen, Roger Foster

IMG_2549

At the latest meeting of the society, new officers were elected (Kathy and I had agreed to serve an initial 3 year term). So we think this photo aptly summarizes how we are now fading into the background…at least as far as the executive operations of the society are concerned.

We will still be involved with the website and will, of course, be moving forward with the journal.

But, for the next three years, please welcome Pierre-François Noppen (president) and Roger Foster (vice-president)!

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