dis:positions | #4 Work
Discussants:
Jean-Philippe Deranty Macquarie University
Michel Lallement Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers
Bénédicte Zimmermann École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales
Moderator:
Katia Genel Université de Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne | Centre Marc Bloch
Economic and technological upheavals have fundamentally changed our understanding of work. But while economic and sociological analyses have oftentimes diagnosed its eventual vanishing, philosophers may yet be interested in something else: the “centrality” of work from an ethical, psychological, and social point of view. After all, as work becomes the site of new demands of self-realisation and autonomy, it is also, on the other hand, a site of suffering.
So how are we to understand what constitutes the activity of working? What does it reveal about our societies? Can we perhaps even liberate ourselves from work? These and other questions are among those that philosophers today may pose when looking at work and its social significance.
The event is part of the series dis:positions | French Philosophy Today.
Map
[osm_map_v3 map_center=”52.512,13.389″ zoom=”16″ width=”100%” height=”450″ map_border=”thin solid black” post_markers=”4″ control=”scaleline”]
When
Tuesday, 7pm
Where
Salle Germaine Tillion, Centre Marc Bloch, Friedrichstraße 191
Language
- French with German translation
Would you be interested in an English edition?
Free entrance
All of our events are open to all and free of charge
About
Economic and technological upheavals have fundamentally changed our understanding of work. But while economic and sociological analyses have oftentimes diagnosed its eventual vanishing, philosophers may yet be interested in something else: the “centrality” of work from an ethical, psychological, and social point of view. After all, as work becomes the site of new demands of self-realisation and autonomy, it is also, on the other hand, a site of suffering.
So how are we to understand what constitutes the activity of working? What does it reveal about our societies? Can we perhaps even liberate ourselves from work? These and other questions are among those that philosophers today may pose when looking at work and its social significance.
The event is part of the series dis:positions | French Philosophy Today.
Map
[osm_map_v3 map_center=”52.512,13.389″ zoom=”16″ width=”100%” height=”450″ map_border=”thin solid black” post_markers=”4″ control=”scaleline”]
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