Beyond Methodological Nationalism is the general topic of the first ever Annual Meeting of the newly found Society for the Study of the Past.
Methodological nationalism – or the idea that “the nation/state/society is the natural social and political form of the modern world” (Wimmer and Schiller, 2002) – remains a constant for historians, in spite of movements towards globalism, claims to decolonise and an increasing awareness of the role that social construction plays in the categories that are used for the writing of history. It functions as the calling card of Eurocentrism, projecting a Westphalian world of nation states into the distant past, and setting the course for an unavoidably ethnonationalist future. It restricts our collective imaginations, rendering alternative political entities – like caliphates, or federations or notions of ‘antinationalist anticolonialism’ – aberrations from the nation state model. It leads to the naturalising of borders, causing death and cruelty to be inflicted on refugees and migrant people as well as all those who sit outside of hegemonic racial-national constructions of identity within a nation state. Many have written that methodological nationalism is misleading or unhelpful – but it is still common to see history books take for granted the antiquity of much later ideas of nation. This conference brings historians from all periods and areas together to organise against it.
To sign up to attend the meeting, please click here – all are welcome, please see below for the provisional programme.
Provisional Programme:
Monday 6th October
10 Registration and Welcome
10:30 Keynote Lecture: Ariel Salzmann (Queen’s)
11:45 Coffee Break
12:15 Panel 1: Muslimness Beyond Nationalism
S. Sayyid (Leeds)
Mona Makinejad (Leeds)
Adnan Hussain (Queen’s)
Chair: AbdoolKarim Vakil (KCL)
13:30 Lunch
14:30 Panel 2: Nationalism and Historical Method
Hélène Maloigne (Independent Scholar)
Islam Al Khatib (LSE)
Emre Keser (California, Santa Cruz)
Les Levidow (The Open University).
Chair: TBC
15:45 Panel 3: History and Activism
Azzédine Ben Abdallah (Parti des Indigènes de la Republique)
Elias D’Imzalene (Perspectives Musulmanes)
Rayan Freschi (CAGE International)
Chair: Marchella Ward (The Open University)
17:00 Roundtable Discussion: Palestine, Liberation and History
Tuesday 7th October
9.15 Panel 4: Global Antiquity and its Limitations
Obert Bernard Mlambo (Rhodes University)
Giulio Leghissa (Toronto)
Timothy McConnell (Leeds)
Sanjana Ramanathan (Michigan, Ann Arbor)
Chair: TBC
10:30 Panel 5: Language and Borders
Kamran Khan (Birmingham)
Leopoldo Fox-Zampiccoli (NYU)
Rogier van der Heijden (Independent Scholar)
Chair: TBC
11:45 Coffee Break
12:15 Panel 6: Imagining Beyond Nationalism
Marcus Bell (Goldsmiths)
Sam Grinsell (Independent Scholar)
Cecily Bateman (Cambridge)
Chair: TBC
13:30 Lunch
14:30 Roundtable: The Future of the Society for the Study of the Past
15:45 Close