-Call for Participation-
2nd International Symposium of Marxism & Sciences Journal
September 1-6
2025
Transylvania
Towards an International Critical Knowledge Network
Announcement: 01 April 2025
Deadline: June 1 (acceptance confirmations until 15th June)
Marxism & Sciences, in collaboration with Tranzit.ro (Cluj, Ro), organises its second symposium, which attempts to foster a forum for discussing the chances for collectively building up an international network of projects in particular pertaining to Radical Science and Art activism, Socialist Heritage Studies and Critical Contemporary Research.
In today’s situation, when Marxist thought seems ‘undead’ and has retreated to the academic realm, all we offer, it seems, are attempts at dissemination of ideas and publication projects (book series, journals etc.). We want to discuss what can be done about it and how that ‘retreat’ is not fortuitous, since Marxist terminology seems indispensable especially in the realm of ‘knowledge production’ and ‘knowledge economy’. We would like to discuss the possibility of building up a platform of exchange, education and information that goes beyond a collection of papers, pamphlets, and books that describe the situation, but to actively connect local grassroots activism and global academic and artistic research. The split of the realms seems to be a major obstacle to us nowadays. This aim in mind we should start in the fields we already work in.
We want to analyse the situation of today and ask – self-critically – about the relevance of Marxist perspectives inside and outside of the sciences and to actively explore the outlook for critical knowledge projects in different fields and from different perspectives. What is critical knowledge? How can we produce, share and disseminate it? What are the chances of exchange and mutual support of projects dedicated to critical knowledge?
We invite participants who already engage or want to become engaged in such a practice to report about problems they are facing, about their projects and to interact with us about mutual collaborations, such as an online platform for connecting different activities and making them more visible to the public. We deem internationalisation and networking a first step to make Marxist and critical research more relevant and to offer possibilities of exchange also in terms of educational projects and curricula development.
Facing the global rise of right-wing politics and the weakness of leftist and ‘posthumanist’ positions throughout the world, alongside the different social and ecological crises on Earth we have to aim at formulating answers and to make our voices heard. Our symposium attempts to integrate different fields and endeavours to provide research, motivation and education in a pluralist and Marxist-inspired perspective.
While the Symposium will feature short presentations and roundtable discussions, emphasis is put on interactive exchange and group discussions.
Tranzit.ro has offered to host our symposium at the new hypha_etc camp in the village of Câmpu Cetății a.k.a. Vármező (Hungarian), Mureș County, Romania, in the hills of Transylvania. https://maps.app.goo.gl/ixuzdJhfy4TEbzTu8
Date: 1-6 September 2025
Plan: September 1: meeting in Cluj-Napoca, shuttle to the site
Symposium: September 2-5
Departure from the site to Cluj-Napoca and farewell: September 6,
The space is limited to a maximum of 30 participants.
Contact
Please send a short introduction, project description and/or ideas you want to discuss (max. one page) to marxismandsciences [at] gmail.com
Deadline: June 1 (acceptance confirmations until 15th June)
Symposium Fees
150€ for academics with institutional support and reimbursement
50€ for wage slaves
20€ for students and unwaged
Banking contact will be provided with the confirmation of acceptance
Travel information
Accommodation: is provided at hypha_etc camp in the Guest house (2-bed rooms) and in the Camp apartments (4–7-bed rooms). All rooms have their own bathroom (shower, toilet, sink). Camp apartments have a minifridge and a cooking station. We provide bedsheets, pillows, blankets, towels, glasses, plates and cutlery. You are not required to bring a sleeping bag.
Transportation
Air travel via e.g. Frankfurt (D), Bergamo (I), Budapest (Hu), Bucharest (Ro), Istanbul (Tr) to Cluj-Napoca (Ro)
From and to Cluj: To facilitate access to the location, we will charter a bus that will take participants from Cluj (and, if need be, from Târgu Mureș) to Câmpu Cetății. The exact location of an eventual stop will be worked out if the stop is requested. The bus will do one trip only. At the end of the program the trip from Câmpu Cetății to Cluj will be provided for in the same way, leaving after lunch and arriving in Cluj in late afternoon.
Breakfast, lunch and dinner is provided by the organizers through daily menus. Tap water is potable but we will provide bottled (plain) water as well. We recommend that you bring a flask or reusable receptacle to help minimize plastic waste.
In the village there are two corner-shops close to the campsite (approx. 1 to 3-minute walk). Also there are two restaurants in the village where you can try out some traditional local dishes. You can check out their menus here: Vándor Inn (2 minutes from the campsite): https://vandorfogado.ro/restaurant/meniu, Fisherman’s Inn (6 minutes from the campsite): https://halaszcsarda.ro/restaurant/. Both restaurants support payment via card.
Other useful information: The campsite is at an altitude of 604 meters, at the feet of Gurghiu Mountains. Even if days are (usually) warm, at night a bit of a chill can come in. At the time of the Summer School rains and storms are not uncommon. We therefore recommend that you pack some warm clothes and water-tight shoes as well. The region is ideal for long walks and trips.
For more information on the symposium organisation, venue, registration and accomodation please see here!
-Call for Contrubutions-
Marxism & Sciences: A Symposium of Nature, Culture, Human and Society
September 14-17
2023
BİLİMLER KÖYÜ (Village of Sciences) Foça, İzmir, Turkey
Announcement: 24 February 2023
Deadline: 30 June 2023
It is said that we live in an era of total crisis. Not only on a cultural, but social, economic, ecological level the term seems ubiquitously used with ever more urgency and on a global scale. In this respect the term crisis today seems to replace the concept of history as a concrete generality in a generic singular form of multi-temporalities. The anamnesis of crisis also pertains to the sciences and the ideal of science in exactly the general sense of a plural unity which encompasses all kinds of organized attempts of knowledge making. If the institutions of knowledge production and mediation are in a crisis the consequences of the deep ruptures in collective praxis become graspable. A Marxist approach cannot remain just negative as a mere critique in face of the commodification of knowledge and manipulation of feelings and consciousness. Rather, the task is to seize the means of production even on the level of mental labour and iconic engineering. In this way the possibilities of a common use and a social orientation of the sciences, technology and all kinds of collective praxis can be opened up beyond extractivist exploitation and for the common good.
In a wider sense, the term “crisis” signifies a situation that is simultaneously indeterminate as much as it is over determinate. Looked at negatively, and in the light of the not-yet-over pandemic, local conflicts and confrontations, from the proxy war in Syria to the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, which carries the potential of transmuting into a full-scale global confrontation, food crisis, global economic stagnation, and environmental catastrophes, that crisis appears as a threat that may completely wipe out civilization and (human) life of the planet. However, true to the etymological roots of the term, a crisis also signifies possibilities of anticipating and building a radically different future from within the existing uncertainties.
That ongoing crisis seems to be a multifaceted totality; the multitude of crises humanity experiences are forms of existence of the crisisridden essence of capitalism. Capitalism seems to be a factor of the crisis on different levels.
The global economic stagnation, “negative economic growth”, the rise of poverty and the widening of the gap between the rich and the poor on worldwide scale and high inflation, which allegedly has been caused by the pandemic evidence the fragility of the capitalist economy that follows its contradictory inner structure.
At the political sphere, we witness the erosion of the state and political institutions, which is manifest in the rise of ultra-rightwing movements, the undermining of the law and constitution by those in power, and the subordination of the will of the state to that of the so-called “leading elites” and “charismatic leaders”. Hence, the transubstantiation of the state from the instrument of maintaining the order and suppressing the class struggle to a means of destabilizing the order and creating and deepening the perception of crisis.
At the social level, the rise of authoritarianism is accompanied by suspension and repression of the rights of citizens, particularly those of minorities and marginalized groups, and the attack on social securities and the gains of, the working people, and the rise of racism, nationalism, ethnicism, sexism and patriarchy, and xenophobia. Furthermore, the prevalence of conspiracy theories as new forms of superstition and the distrust toward knowledge producing institutes and institutionally produced knowledge point toward a “spiritual” crisis on a social scale.
At the ecological level, the insatiable urge of capital for valorization, the plunder of natural resources, and land grabbing, sea grabbing and forest grabbing for the sake of profit making and rent acquisition have amounted to an environmental crisis, the forms of manifestation of which are global warming, extreme weather conditions, loss of agricultural resources and the consequent food crisis. The response of the bourgeois technocratic institutions to the imminent total ecological catastrophe does not transcend the boundaries of a managerial approach and suggesting “fixes” to these problems taken in isolation from the totality of crisis while the capitalist state and bourgeois politicians refrain from taking serious action or even agreeing on the measures to be taken.
The aforementioned poses significant theoretical and political challenges and urgently calls for a Marxist response putting forth an encompassing view and methods to guide both theoretical analysis and political action. As stated above, the crisis does not only point to mere negativity, but it also signifies a positive ambivalence that bears the potential for realizing radical change. In order to forge a robust answer we need to critically revise as well as affirm of Marxist categories of analysis and methodological tools. Actualizing this positive potentiality requires a dialectical approach which takes different interrelations and perspectives seriously to cope with complexity and change on a global level. One important aspect of such an approach would be to consider the subject matter of analysis not as a finalized, static entity but as a developing process and seek for the dynamics of its radical change within the system itself through identifying the future in the present in the form of potentialities.
To that end we have to explicate the role of knowledge and the sciences as expression of the present societal context as well as tools for change. Not only do we have to analyze the mechanisms of how we reached the above-mentioned crises, but even more important is to try and define ways to break out of the current hegemony of capitalism. A Marxist approach to the sciences is the understanding how conscious collective human activity can foster a better future.
We invite contributions that facilitate approaching the crises holistically and analyzing them as forms of manifestation of the total capitalist crisis. Such an approach transcends the limitations of conventional, symptomatic representations and enhances the dialectical grasp of the crisis pointing toward prospects of its overcoming and building a better world.
The themes to be addressed are, but not limited to:
• The crisis and the capitalist state; the capitalist state in/as crisis
• The crisis in academia and its relation to capitalization of sciences and commodification of knowledge
• Environmental crisis and climate change
• Forms of class struggle in the face of total crisis
• The self-organization of people, including the decline of tradeunions and traditional political parties
• Gender-based oppression in late capitalism
• The straight jacked of formal logic and its final destination in binary digitalization leading to algorithmic approaches such as the so-called Artificial Intelligence. The need for exploring dialectics as a counter tool for human progress.
• The crisis of value
• The refugee crisis
• The crisis of radical left and the rise/fall of identity politics
• Alternative conceptions of the crisis and their critique, e.g., anthropocene, capitalocene, etc.
• (a critique of) non-Marxist responses to the crisis, e.g., new materialism, post-humanism, etc.
•The role of music, film, theater, and literature as expression of resistance.
• The rise of ultra-right-wing movements and its expression of fear, poverty, and ‘the other’
Please submit your extended abstracts (400 to 500 words long with 5 to 7 bibliographic entries), prepared for blind reading, and a separate title page that includes the title of your submission, affiliation, and contact information to marxismsymposium[at]gmail.com (subject of the email should be 1st symposium of the M&S). Selected papers from the symposium will be invited for evaluation to be published in Marxism & Sciences Volume 3 Issue 1, Summer 2024.
For more information on the symposium organisation, venue, registration and accomodation please see here!