14/02/2023

Reader responses to Death is Hard Work by Khaled Khalifa and Planet of Clay by Samar Yazbek

Presentation by Brigitte Herremans at the American Comparative Literature Association’s Annual Meeting 2023 to take place at the Sheraton Grand Riverwalk in Chicago, March 16-19, 2023. The paper is part of the stream: ‘Human Rights Literature and the Politics of Responsibility’.

Abstract of the panel 

In recent decades, human rights have risen to prominence as a “dominant discourse for addressing issues of social justice” (Swanson Goldberg and Schultheis Moore 2012, 4). Scholars have demonstrated (and interrogated) the role that literature has played in human rights’ ascension–from the novel’s progressive expansion of the category of the “human” (Hunt 2007), to the widespread (albeit compromised) liberal belief that conveying narratives of suffering to concerned publics can promote justice (Schaffer and Smith 2004), to the evidence that “human rights bestsellers” shore up American militarism and neoliberal imperialism (Anker 2012). Yet the idea of human rights entails the thorny question of responsibility. If “[e]very right implies corresponding or ‘correlative’ duties in order to see that right respected, protected, or fulfilled” (Moyn 2016), then how should scholars conceptualize responsibility for human rights? In particular, how might we theorize responsibility for forms of ordinary abuse, or “structural injustice” (Young 2011), produced not (necessarily) by state actors or other clear-cut perpetrators but rather by the unevenness of the global socioeconomic order itself? In the entanglements of neoliberal austerity, debt peonage, and resource scarcity, for example, we see how this unevenness poses threats to human social rights and exacerbates the effects of climate crisis–in turn fomenting conditions for the global migration of refugees, reactive ethnonationalism, and fascist politics.  How might literature help scholars to better conceptualize forms of diffuse responsibility for chronic human rights violence? How does literature expand the timescale of responsibility, framing contemporary inequality as the long afterlife of transatlantic slavery, colonial exploitation, and racial capitalism? How can scholars theorize responsibility responsibly–in a way that does not reify North-South divides or collapse into humanitarian saviorism? And most importantly, how might literature offer new ways of imagining transnational solidarity in struggles to change the structural conditions that produce human rights violations? We invite contributions that explore both how literature helps us respond to these questions and how the challenges of thinking responsibility for human rights spur innovations in literary form. Possible topics can include: Care ethics (Collins 2015; De la Bellacasa 2017; Mihai 2022) Responsibility of implicated subjects and beneficiaries (Rothberg 2019; Robbins 2017) Migrant and refugee literature (Fukushima, 2019; Le Espiritu et al. 2022) Human-nonhuman interdependence (Iheka 2017) Politics of narrative empathy (Keen 2007) Global climate justice and reparations (Táíwò 2022) Human rights and “literary accountability” (DeStrooper 2022) We welcome presenters working in all languages, historical periods, and theoretical frameworks.

Date & Time

March 17, 2023

08:30

Address

Sheraton Grand Chicago Riverwalk, East North Water Street, Chicago, IL, USA

Details

Organized by American Comparative Literature Association