Vortrag
24.03.2021 · 19.00 Uhr

Jean-Luc Nancy: Touche-touche

Ort: ICI Berlin, Christinenstr. 18–19, Haus 8, 10119 Berlin
Organisiert von Hanna Hamel (ZfL), Apostolos Lampropoulos (Université Bordeaux Montaigne), Peter Rehberg (Schwules Museum)
Kontakt: Hanna Hamel
Vortrag von Jean-Luc Nancy (European Graduate School) im Rahmen der Online-Vortragsreihe Intimacy, mit Eva Geulen und Apostolos Lampropoulos

Jean-Luc Nancy has long considered touch to be central for an understanding of the relation between the self and the world, a crucial question of his philosophy he will also explore in his talk entitled “Touche–touche.” His rethinking of community and the political from phenomenological and deconstructive perspectives directs our attention to the body and its ‘naked existence’ beyond metaphysics. The impact of this philosophical project on contemporary modes of being together is also demonstrated in his most recent publication on the Corona crisis, Un trop humain virus (2020).

This lecture series takes queer theory’s conversation about intimacy as a starting point to discuss some of its cultural possibilities, mediated forms, and philosophical trajectories in the context of Corona. It is part of the public program of the exhibition Intimacy: New Queer Art from Berlin and Beyond at Schwules Museum.

 

Eine Kooperation zwischen ICI Berlin, dem ZfL-Projekt Stadt, Land, Kiez. Nachbarschaften in der Berliner Gegenwartsliteratur und dem Schwulen Museum. Gefördert aus Mitteln des Hauptstadtkulturfonds.

 

Abb. oben: © Spyros Rennt: Hanging out at Ludos, 2020 (Detail), Teil der Ausstellung »Intimacy: New Queer Art from Berlin and Beyond« im Schwulen Museum

Programm

Online-Vortragsreihe Intimacy

In the time of Corona, intimacy is precarious: as an experience we are in danger of losing, but also one we are nostalgically mourning or re-imagining for a future to come. What does a pandemic and its cultural, social, and technological consequences, such as the protection from others and the disappearance of social encounters and bodily contact, teach us about intimacy? How does Covid-19 change our understanding of intimate moments?

In the context of queer culture and theory, intimacy has had a peculiar position for quite some time. For intimacy is not necessarily the scene in which identities are formed or affirmed. Queer theory has emphasized intimacy as a site where identity is left behind and new forms of the self can emerge, for example in forms of public sex, or what Leo Bersani calls ‘impersonal intimacy.’ One might say that intimacy itself is a queer phenomenon.

 
Vollständiges Vortragsprogramm

Donnerstag, 11.02.2021, 19.00
Susanna Paasonen: Infrastructures of Intimacy and the Deplatforming of Sex

Mittwoch, 24.03.2021, 19.00
Jean-Luc Nancy: Touche-touche

Montag, 26.04.2021, 19.00
Tim Dean: How to Have Sex in a Pandemic