Tithi Bhattacharya's lecture (Audio only)

Tithi Bhattacharya's lecture (Audio only)

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Tithi Bhattacharya's lecture (Audio only)
Public lecture: Social Reproduction Theory as Diagnostic, Abolition as Politics: Reimagining Anticapitalism Date: Thursday, September 26, 2024 from 5:007:00 PM Location: Victoria College, 91 Charles Street West, Room VC 323 Since the welcome renewal of scholarly and political attention on care and social reproduction, there has also been an unspoken ahistoricization of care as a beautiful, even virtuous, expression of human labor. Care, as practiced within capitalism, however, is a dialectical unity of opposites. On the one hand it constitutes a stubborn, intractable aspect of humanity that refuses capitalist modifications. On the other, as an act inserted into capitalist social relations, and part of it, it can be limited in its welfare functions. Social Reproduction Theory (SRT) that studies the social relations through which human beings create (birth), maintain, and generate labor power is concerned with both these dimensions for labor power for under capitalism, labor power is both inseparable from a living, breathing human being, as well as an exploitable commodity. But while SRT can be a diagnostic of capitalist social relations that has the unique potential to reveal both the stable procedures of capital as well as its fault lines, abolition, as learnt from the Black radical tradition, must be its politics. SRT, in itself, does not point towards a solution, merely outlines the problem; it is abolition that creates that horizon of liberation giving us a futural glimpse when care can transcend need and become a principal. ... The Northrop Frye Professor in Literary Theory is selected annually, to bring innovative comparative scholars to deliver one or two public lectures to the University of Toronto community, offer workshops and seminars at the Centre for Comparative Literature, and meet with faculty and students. ... The Centre for Comparative Literature at the University of Toronto offers M.A. and Ph.D. programs of study in every major area from medieval to contemporary literature with particular emphasis on literary theory and criticism. The range of languages, literatures and special resources available at the University of Toronto enables students of Comparative Literature to explore literary achievements in a vast spectrum of national and linguistic traditions, while the Centre’s strong emphasis on modern literary theory gives their studies critical and methodological coherence. For more info, please visit our website at: http://complit.utoronto.ca/