Program

In conditions of shrinking private liberty and growing public apathy and personal anomie, what is meaningful individuality? How is individual freedom to be thought fruitfully in the face of the threat of surveillance, by the state as well as private actors? This conference brings together scholars from various fields to examine the meaning of individuality and individual liberty in today’s society.

Program

Friday, October 14

Location: Jerome Green Annex, Columbia Law School

5 – 7pm       Keynote speech: George Kateb (Princeton University)
                               “Tyranny and the Fate of Democratic Individuality”

Saturday, October 15

Location: The Heyman Center, 2nd Floor Common Room

9.30-11am       Panel 1: Market, Privacy, and Docility
Alex Zakaras (University of Vermont)
     “Depoliticizing the Market: Nature and Providence in Early American Political Thought”

Helen Nissenbaum (New York University)
     “Can Data Use Regulation Replace Privacy in a Free Society?”

 11-11.30am     Coffee break

11.30- 1pm      Panel 2: Social Surveillance & Individual Freedom
Nancy Rosenblum (Harvard University)
     “Minding Our Own Business, Minding Our Neighbors”

Luise Papcke (Columbia University)
     “Individuality in the Age of Marketed Surveillance”

2.30- 4pm        Panel 3: Docility and Resistance
Nancy Hirschmann (University of Pennsylvania)
     “Docile Body, Docile Will: A Feminist Disability Perspective”

Bernard E. Harcourt (Columbia University/Institute for Advanced Study)
      “Rethinking Docility in the Digital Age: A Postmortem

4pm                 Closing Remarks

 

Sponsors
The Department of Political Science, Columbia University
Columbia Center for Contemporary Critical Thought
The Heyman Center for the Humanities
Institute for Comparative Literature & Society

Contact: docileindividuals@gmail.com