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    October 16 – 17

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[Tribalism and Cosmopolitanism: How Can We Imagine a Pluralist Politics?]

OSUN, Hannah Arendt Center, and Center for Civic Engagement present:

Tribalism and Cosmopolitanism: How Can We Imagine a Pluralist Politics?

Thursday, October 17, 2024 – Friday, October 18, 2024
Olin Hall

  • Overview
  • Schedule
  • WEBCAST
  • Speakers
  • Readings
  • Location
  • Contest
  • Media

Schedule

This is schedule is subject to change.

Thursday, October 17th

10:00 am 
Introduction
Deirdre d’Albertis

10:10 am
Tribalism and Cosmopolitanism
Roger Berkowitz
 
10:30 am
Tribalism and the Human Condition
Sebastian Junger
Discussant: Roger Berkowitz 

12:00 pm
Can We Be Cosmopolitan Tribalists?
Shai Lavi and Khaled Furani

1:00 pm –  2:00 pm
Lunch
 
1:30-2:30 pm 
[OPTIONAL] Breakout Sessions:
 
Post Lecture Discussion and Reflection
Sebastian Junger
Moderator: Jana Mader
Olin Hall: Auditorium

Navigating Tribalism and Cosmopolitanism: A Dialogue Group Discussion
Virtual Breakout Session [Online Only]
Susan Oberman
Click to join the ZOOM; Meeting ID: 813 1776 2352
Required readings: Public Dialogue and Debate and Dialogue

2:45 pm
Are We a Tribe?
Thomas Chatterton Williams and Ayishat Akanbi
Moderator: Roger Berkowitz

3:45 pm
On the Tribe of Boys
Niobe Way 
Moderator: Seth Halvorson

4:45 pm: Break

5:00 pm
Hannah Arendt’s Tribal Cosmopolitanism
Lyndsey Stonebridge
Discussant: Jana Schmidt

5:45 pm
Wine & Cheese Reception
Olin Hall Atrium

Friday, October 18th

9:30 am
Introduction
Leon Botstein

9:50 am
Tribalism and Modern Politics: Lessons from Ireland
Fintan O’Toole
Discussant: Joseph O’Neill

11:00 am
Another Cosmopolitanism
Seyla Benhabib
Discussant: Thomas Bartscherer

12:00 pm
Bloods, Crips, and Overcoming Tribalism in Los Angeles
Panel Discussion: Mandar Apte, Phillip “Rock” Lester, and Gilbert Johnson
Moderator: Niobe Way

1:00pm - 2:45pm
Lunch

1:30 pm - 2:15pm
[OPTIONAL] Breakout Sessions:
 
Peacebuilding Workshop (live stream available)
Mandar Apte
Olin Hall Auditorium

Tribalism and Cosmopolitanism in Israel and Palestine
Shai Lavi and Khaled Furani
Olin Hall: Room 202

2:15 pm
[OPTIONAL] Hannah Arendt Walking Tour 
Hannah Arendt’s grave and personal library exhibit
Jana Mader and Lyndsey Stonebridge
Meet in the Olin Atrium at the Registration Table

2:45  pm   
The Equivocations of Tribalism
Uday Mehta
Discussant: Roger Berkowitz

3:45 pm  
Technology, Pluralism, and Cosmopolitanism Amidst the Return of Tribal
Zoe Hitzig and Ann Lauterbach
Discussant: Allison Stanger

5:00 pm
Wine & Cheese Reception 
Olin Hall Atrium

WEBCAST


Online Registration is closed. Onsite registration will be open both days of the conference. However, please note it is too late to order lunch tickets.

The webcast does not require registration. Simply visit our YouTube Channel to view the conference live. The webcast is being recorded and we will post the videos after the conference. 

WEBCAST

 

Speakers

The full conference will be available via Live Webcast. ALL registrants will also receive the link to the live webcast.

Ayishat Akanbi

[Ayishat Akanbi]
Ayishat Akanbi is a fashion stylist and writer based in London. With over a decade of experience working with clients such as Rod Stewart, Labrinth, and Naomi Campbell, in the last five years she turned her focus to observing cultural trends.  

It’s widely accepted that everything is political, but it's Ayishat view that much of the personal becoming politicised is helping to fuel tensions. 

Through her talks, interviews, and online posts, Ayishat challenges popular ideas by championing understanding, curiosity, and independent thought. Her belief that self-knowledge and honest reflection can resolve divisions has led her to speak at Google Headquarters, The Sydney Opera House, Tate Modern & The Victoria & Albert Museum. 

Mandar Apte

[Mandar Apte]
Mandar currently manages Cities4Peace a nonprofit peacebuilding consultancy of the Art of Living Foundation and the International Association for Human Values (IAHV) that promotes peace in cities and communities across the world worldwide. His pioneering efforts in collaboration with Los Angeles PD to reduce gang violence and with UN Peacekeeping Mission in Cyprus to enable harmonious coexistence between Turkish and Greek Cypriots are noteworthy. 
Based on the impact made, Mandar has recently been appointed by the UN Peacebuilding Office as an advisor to the special UN project on "Private Sector Investments for Youth-Led Peacebuilding". As part of this mandate, Mandar is engaging the private sector and educational institutions through his thought leadership.
Prior to this, Mandar has Produced & Directed From India With Love - a documentary film that promotes the message of nonviolence in the world. Mandar has Mandar has a BS (Chem Engg) from Univ of Mumbai (India) and an MS (Petroleum Engineering) from Univ of Tulsa (USA). 

For more about his work; visit his website.
 VIEW MORE >>
Prior to this, Mandar has Produced & Directed From India With Love - a documentary film that promotes the message of nonviolence in the world. The film is available on Amazon US and Amazon UK.

Mandar has a BS (Chem Engg) from Univ of Mumbai (India) and an MS (Petroleum Engineering) from Univ of Tulsa (USA). 

For more about his work; visit his website.

Thomas Bartscherer

[Thomas Bartscherer]
Thomas Bartscherer is the Peter Sourian Senior Lecturer in the Humanities at Bard College. He writes on the intersection of literature and philosophy, with a particular focus on tragic drama, aesthetics, and performance. He also writes on contemporary art, new media technology, and the history and practice of liberal education, and is co-editor of the critical edition Hannah Arendt’s The Life of the Mind (forthcoming, 2023).
 

Seyla Benhabib

[Seyla Benhabib]
Seyla Benhabib is the Eugene Meyer Professor of Political Science and Philosophy Emerita at Yale University where she taught from 2001 to 2020.  She is currently Senior Research Fellow and Professor of Law Adjunct at Columbia University, and Affiliate Faculty in the Department of Philosophy. She is also a Senior Fellow at Columbia University’s Center for Contemporary Critical Thought. 

She was the President of the Eastern Division of the American Philosophical Association in 2006-07 and has been a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences since 1995, and an Honorary Fellow of the British Academy since  2018. She has previously taught at the New School for Social Research and Harvard Universities, where she was Professor of Government from 1993-2000 and Chair of Harvard’s Program on Social Studies from 1996-2000. 

Professor Benhabib is the recipient of the Ernst Bloch prize for 2009, the Leopold Lucas Prize from the Theological Faculty of the University of Tubingen (2012), and the Meister Eckhart Prize (2014; one of Germany’s most prestigious philosophical prizes). A Guggenheim Fellowship recipient (2011-12), she has been research affiliate and senior scholar in many institutions in the US and in Europe including Berlin’s Wissenschaftskolleg (2009), NYU Strauss Center for the Study of Law and Justice (2012), the European University Institute in Florence (Summer 2015), Center for Gender Studies at Cambridge University ( Spring 2017),  Columbia University Law School (Spring 2016; Spring 2018) and Center for Humanities and Critical Theory, Humboldt University Berlin (Summer 2018). She was Albert Hirschman Fellow at the Institute for the Human Sciences in Vienna in November 2023.
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Professor Benhabib holds Honorary Degrees from the Universities of Utrecht (2004), Valencia (2010), Bogazici University in Istanbul (2012), Georgetown University (2014),  the University of Geneva (Fall 2018),  the Center of Latin American Studies in Chile (Summer 2021) and the Université Catholique de Louvain and KULeuven (jointly awarded). (2024)
Her work has been translated into 13 languages (German, Spanish, French, Italian, Brazilian, Turkish, Swedish, Russian, Serbo-Croatian, Hebrew, Polish, Japanese, Chinese and Korean) and she has also edited and coedited 10 volumes on topics ranging from democracy and difference to the rights of migrant women and children; the communicative ethics controversy and Hannah Arendt. The volume, Migrations and Mobilities: Gender, Borders and Citizenship (NYU Press, 2009), co-edited with Judith Resnik from the Yale Law School was named by Choice one of the outstanding academic books of the year. 

Her most recent books include: The Claims of Culture. Equality and Diversity in the Global Era, (2002); The Rights of Others. Aliens, Citizens and Residents (2004), winner of the Ralph Bunche award of the American Political Science Association (2005) and the North American Society for Social Philosophy award (2004); Another Cosmopolitanism: Hospitality, Sovereignty and Democratic Iterations, with responses by Jeremy Waldron, Bonnie Honig and Will Kymlicka (Oxford University Press, 2006); Dignity in Adversity. Human Rights in Troubled Times (UK and USA: Polity Press, 2011);  Gleichheit und Differenz. Die Würde des Menschen und die Souveränitätsansprüche der Vőlker ( Equality and Difference. Human Dignity and Popular Sovereignty. Bilingual edition in English and German: Mohr Siebeck, 2013), and edited together with Volker Kaul, Toward New Democratic Imaginaries. Istanbul Seminars on Islam, Culture, and Politics (Springer 2016).  Her latest book has appeared in 2018 from Princeton University Press, Exile, Statelessness and Migration. Playing Chess with History form Hannah Arendt to Isaiah Berlin.

She is currently at work on a monograph for Polity Press called “At the Margins of the Modern State” and has edited a collection of articles with Ayelet Shachar on Migration and Refugee topics called, Lawless Zones, Rightless Subjects: Migration and Asylum New Border Regimes. (Cambridge University Press, forthcoming)

Roger Berkowitz

[Roger Berkowitz]
Roger Berkowitz is Founder and Academic Director of the Hannah Arendt Center at Bard College. A Professor of Politics, Philosophy,  and Human Rights, Berkowitz writes and speaks about how justice is made present in the world. He is author of The Gift of Science: Leibniz and the Modern Legal Tradition, co-editor of Artifacts of Thinking: Reading Hannah Arendt's Denktagebuch (2017), Thinking in Dark Times: Hannah Arendt on Ethics and Politics (2010), The Intellectual Origins of the Global Financial Crisis (2012), and editor of the annual journal HA: The Journal of the Hannah Arendt Center.
 VIEW MORE >>
His essay "Reconciling Oneself to the Impossibility of Reconciliation: Judgment and Worldliness in Hannah Arendt's Politics," has helped bring attention to the centrality of reconciliation in Hannah Arendt's work.  The Arendt Center organizes an annual conference every October. Professor Berkowitz edits the Hannah Arendt Center's weekly newsletter, Amor Mundi. His writing has appeared in The New York Times, Bookforum, The Chronicle of Higher Education, The Paris Review Online, Democracy: A Journal of Ideas, The American Interest, and many other publications. Berkowitz is the 2019 recipient of the Hannah Arendt Award for Political Thought given by the Heinrich Böll Stiftung in Bremen, Germany. 

Leon Botstein

[Leon Botstein]
Leon Botstein is president and Leon Levy Professor in the Arts of Bard College. Founder of Bard High School Early College, Dr. Botstein put into practice a vision of high school as a public space where young adults, with the guidance of a college level faculty, explore their intellectual potential.

He has published widely in the fields of education, music, and history and culture and is the author of several books including Jefferson's Children: Education and the Promise of American Culture, and editor of The Compleat Brahms and The Musical Quarterly. He is the music director of the American Symphony Orchestra and The Orchestra Now (TŌN), and conductor laureate and principal guest conductor of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, where he served as music director. He is the founder and artistic co-director of the Bard Music Festival. His work has been acknowledged with awards from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Harvard University, government of Austria, and Carnegie Foundation. He was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2011.

He is also music director and principal conductor of The Orchestra Now (TŌN) and the American Symphony Orchestra, artistic co-director of the Bard Music Festival. Botstein is editor of The Musical Quarterly and writes on music and culture.

Deirdre D'Albertis

[Deirdre D'Albertis]
Deirdre D'Albertis is the Vice President and Dean of Bard College. As chief academic officer, Dean Deirdre d'Albertis works with the president and the faculty to advance the central academic purpose of Bard College.

Khaled Furani

[Khaled Furani]
Khaled Furani is a professor of anthropology at Tel-Aviv University on the lands of al-Sheikh Muwannis. He researches language and literature, theology, secularism, sovereignty, Palestine, and the history of anthropology. For several years, he taught a seminar on "Reading Hannah Arendt for Anthropology." His books include Silencing the Sea: Secular Rhythms in Palestinian Poetry (Stanford University Press 2012) and Redeeming Anthropology: A Theological Critique of a Modern Science (Oxford University Press, 2019). He co-edited, with Yara Sa'di-Ibraheem, Inside the Leviathan: Palestinian Experiences at Israeli Universities (in Arabic, Van Leer Jerusalem Institute, 2022). His most recent article is "Khalifah and the Modern Sovereign: Revisiting a Qur'anic Ideal from within the Palestinian Condition" (Journal of Religion, 2022). 

Seth Halvorson

[Seth Halvorson]
Seth David Halvorson is Visiting Associate Professor of Philosophy at Bard College. He earned his BA from Macalester College, an MA from Stanford University and his Ph.D. from Columbia University. For the past 11 years he was Associate Professor of Philosophy, History, and Political Studies at Bard High School Early College, Newark - where he was founding faculty and coach of the debate team. Halvorson works in the intersection of Politics, Ethics, Law, Education, and the History of Ideas. In addition to the First Year Seminar, Seth teaches a common course, The Science of Human Connection. His work focuses on Philosophy of Care, Philosophy and/of Education, and Philosophy and Humor.

Zoë Hitzig

[Zoë Hitzig]
Zoë Hitzig, an economist and writer, is currently a Junior Fellow at the Harvard Society of Fellows. Her research centers on social tradeoffs in the design of computational and economic systems. She is the author of two books of poetry, Mezzanine (2020) and Not Us Now (2024), winner of the Changes Prize. She currently serves as poetry editor of The Drift, and her work has appeared in Harper's, The New Yorker, New York Review of Books, Artforum, WIRED and elsewhere. She holds a PhD in economics from Harvard.

Gilbert Johnson

[Gilbert Johnson]
Gilbert Johnson is a native of South Central LA and a dedicated community organizer. He was introduced to civic engagement work in 2009, which marked the last year he was incarcerated. Having to navigate homelessness, gang involvement, substance abuse, and finding it hard to gain sustainable employment, working several odd jobs due to his lengthy criminal record, Gilbert’s prayers were answered when he received the opportunity to be an Outreach Worker and Civic Engagement Specialist at Community Coalition (CoCo), located in the heart of South Central.

After years of deep community engagement and peacebuilding work, Gilbert became the Lead Justice Organizer, leading CoCo's criminal justice reform and reentry work. While at CoCo, Gilbert drafted the 10-Point Plan to Reduce Violence in South Central after his friend, the late Ermias Asghedom, also known as Nipsey Hussle, passed away in 2019. This community-driven initiative morphed into the City of Los Angeles' current South LA Community Safety Initiative (SLACSI). The SLACSI helped reduce violent crime during the summer by implementing healing-centered activities in communities and parks across South Los Angeles.

Gilbert left CoCo to become the CA TimeDone Manager with Californians for Safety and Justice, helping to pass multiple state-level justice reform bills. Gilbert is a member of the Black Men Maroon Space, a group of formerly incarcerated Black men who engage in somatic transformative practices that unpack and address deep traumatic experiences.

Sebastian Junger

[Sebastian Junger]
Sebastian Junger is the #1 New York Times Bestselling author of THE PERFECT STORM, FIRE, A DEATH IN BELMONT, WAR, TRIBE, FREEDOM and IN MY TIME OF DYING.   As an award-winning journalist, a contributing editor to Vanity Fair and a special correspondent at ABC News, he has covered major international news stories around the world, and has received both a National Magazine Award and a Peabody Award. Junger is also a documentary filmmaker whose debut film "Restrepo", a feature-length documentary (co-directed with Tim Hetherington), was nominated for an Academy Award and won the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance.   
 
 VIEW MORE >>

"Restrepo," which chronicled the deployment of a platoon of U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan's Korengal Valley, is widely considered to have broken new ground in war reporting.  Junger has since produced and directed three additional documentaries about war and its aftermath. "Which Way Is The Front Line From Here?", which premiered on HBO, chronicles the life and career of his friend and colleague, photojournalist Tim Hetherington, who was killed while covering the civil war in Libya in 2011.  "Korengal" returns to the subject of combat and tries to answer the eternal question of why young men miss war.   "The Last Patrol", which also premiered on HBO, examines the complexities of returning from war by following Junger and three friends--all of whom had experienced combat, either as soldiers or reporters--as they travel up the East Coast railroad lines on foot as "high-speed vagrants."

Sebastian Junger is the founder and director of Vets Town Hall.

Junger has also written for magazines including Harper's, The New York Times Magazine, National Geographic Adventure, Outside and Men's Journal. His reporting on Afghanistan in 2000, profiling Northern Alliance leader Ahmed Shah Massoud, who was assassinated just days before 9/11, became the subject of the National Geographic documentary "Into the Forbidden Zone," and introduced America to the Afghan resistance fighting the Taliban. 
He lives in New York City and Cape Cod.

Ann Lauterbach

[Ann Lauterbach]
Ann Lauterbach is a poet and essayist. Her eleventh collection of poetry, Door, was bublished by Penguin Random House in March 2023. She writes at the intersection of poetics, politics and the visual arts. A recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship (1986) and a MacArthur Fellowship (1993), she is Ruth and David Schwab Professor of Languages and Literature (Written Arts) at Bard College.

Shai Lavi

[Shai Lavi]
Shai Lavi is a Professor of Law and heads the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute. He is also the co-director of the Minerva Center for the Interdisciplinary Study of End of Life, and until 2017 was also the founding director of the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics – both at Tel Aviv University.
 
He received his Ph.D. from the Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program, University of California Berkeley. His book The Modern Art of Dying: A History of Euthanasia in the United States (Princeton University Press) won the 2006 Distinguished Book Award in sociology of law from the American Sociological Association. He was a Fulbright fellow at the University of Berkeley, California, a visiting professor at Toronto University and at Cardozo Law School, and a Humboldt fellow at the Dubnow Instittue for Jewish History and Culture in Leipzig and at the faculty of law at the Humboldt University, Berlin. He is currently working on medical authority over the body in Germany, Turkey, and Israel. He is a member of the National Bioethics Council. He is also a member on several editorial boards including Law, Culture and Humanities Journal and Critical Analysis of Law.

Phillip "Rock" Lester

[Phillip "Rock" Lester]
Phillip "Rock" Lester is a community activist, survivor, business owner and formerly incarcerated person. He grew up in South Central Los Angeles within the Harvard Park area.

In 2016, Phillip became involved with policy reform, working with organizations such as ARC and LA Voice and Youth Justice Coalition. He has been active in multiple civic engagement campaigns, helping to advocate for resources within LA county, notably, Measure J as well as criminal justice reform policies in California such as Prop. 57, Prop. 17, SB 1308, SB 1391, SB 1437 and SB 731.

Phillip has an educational background in mathematics, sociology and art. He was honored and awarded in the Fall of 2021 with a Certificate of Appreciation by Arizona State University educators for his role in developing its ‘Future ID’ program, an on-campus course that demonstrates the impact of system-impacted people having a future vision for success.
 VIEW MORE >>
Phillip is currently working with the Everyday Heroes program in Watts, doing advocacy work, community engagement, and entrepreneurial training for the youth.

He is also a board member of the Watts Neighborhood Council and is the Southern Chapter Coordinator for Time Done.

Jana Mader

[Jana Mader]
Jana Mader is the Director of Academic Programs at the Hannah Arendt Center and a Visiting Assistant Professor in Environmental Studies and the Humanities. Her teaching and research focus on the history, art, and literature of the Hudson River Valley, particularly in the 19th century. As a scholar, writer, and translator, she works at the intersection of theory and practice. She has published four books, including a novel and a comparative analysis of 19th-century literature on the Hudson Valley and the Rhine. "Walk Her Way New York City" will come out in the Spring of 2025. More about her work can be found at janamarlene.com.

Uday Mehta

[Uday Mehta]
Uday Singh Mehta is Distinguished Professor of Political Science at the CUNY Graduate Center and the 2022 Yehuda Elkana Fellow (awarded by Central European University and the Hannah Arendt Center at Bard College). Professor Mehta has taught at several universities, including Princeton, Cornell, MIT, University of Chicago, University of Pennsylvania, Hull and Amherst College. He is the author of The Anxiety of Freedom: Imagination and Individuality in the Political Thought of John Locke(Cornell University Press, 1992) and Liberalism and Empire, (University of Chicago Press, 2000). Liberalism and Empire was awarded the J. David Greenstone prize for the best book in Political Theory by the American Political Science Association in 2002. In 2003, Mehta was one of ten recipients of the prestigious “Carnegie Scholars” prize given to “scholars of exceptional creativity.” His forthcoming book is titled A Different Vision: Gandhi’s Critique of Political Rationality.

Joseph O'Neill

[Joseph O'Neill]
Joseph O'Neill's novels include Netherland, which received the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, and Godwin (2024). His writing on politics appears in the New York Review of Books. He was born in Ireland, grew up in the Netherlands, worked as a barrister in London, and now lives in New York. He is Distinguished Visiting Professor of Written Arts at Bard College.

Fintan O'Toole

[Fintan O'Toole]
Fintan O'Toole is a columnist with The Irish Times and advising editor of The New York Review of Books. He is the winner of the Robert Silvers Prize for Journalism, the Orwell Prize and the European Press Prize. He is currently working on the official biography of Seamus Heaney.

Born in Dublin in 1958, he is a member of the Royal Irish Academy and an honorary international member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He taught at Princeton where was Professor of Irish Letters. 
His many books include A Traitor’s Kiss: The Life of Richard Brinsley Sheridan; White Savage: William Johnson and the Invention of America; A History of Ireland in 100 Objects; and Heroic Failure: Brexit and the Politics of Pain.

His most recent book, We Don’t Know Ourselves: A Personal History of Ireland Since 1958 was named Book of the Year in the An Post Irish Book Awards and as one of the ten best books of 2022 by the New York Times. 

Jana Schmidt

[Jana Schmidt]
Jana Schmidt, assistant professor of German Studies, writes about German and American transatlantic literatures and theory. After completing her PhD in comparative literature at SUNY Buffalo, she first came to Bard as a postdoctoral fellow at the Hannah Arendt Center, where she also served as director of academic programs in 2022–23. She has held fellowships at the German Literature Archive Marbach, German Historical Institute Washington, and at Fordham University and the New York Public Library. Her first book, Hannah Arendt und die Folgen (2018), traces the influence of Hannah Arendt’s thought on the work of a variety of postwar thinkers, artists, and activists. She has written essays for publications such as Philosophy Today, Los Angeles Review of Books, Journal of Narrative Theory, and German Quarterly. Her current writing project deals with the encounter of German-speaking refugees with African American thinkers and politics from the 1940s onward. 

Allison Stanger

[Allison Stanger]
Allison Stanger is Russell Leng ’60 Professor of International Politics and Economics at Middlebury College; 2021-22 Research Affiliate (co-lead, Theory of AI Practice Initiative) at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University; an External Professor and Science Board member at the Santa Fe Institute; and a Senior Advisor to the OSUN Hannah Arendt Humanities Network. In 2020-21, she held the Cary and Ann Maguire Chair in Ethics and American History at the Library of Congress.

She is the author of Whistleblowers: Honesty in America from Washington to Trump (Chinese edition to appear in September 2022) and One Nation Under Contract: The Outsourcing of American Power and the Future of Foreign Policy, both with Yale University Press. She is the co-editor (with W. Brian Arthur and Eric Beinhocker) of Complexity Economics, and the co-editor and co-translator (with Michael Kraus) of Irreconcilable Differences? Explaining Czechoslovakia's Dissolution (Foreword by Václav Havel). Stanger’s writing has appeared in The Atlantic, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Financial Times, International Herald Tribune, New York Times, USA Today, and the Washington Post. 

She has been called to testify before Congress on five occasions and is a life member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Stanger received her Ph.D. in Political Science from Harvard University.

Lyndsey Stonebridge

[Lyndsey Stonebridge]
Lyndsey Stonebridge is a professor of humanities and human rights at the University of Birmingham (UK) and a Fellow of the British Academy. Her books include Placeless People: Writing, Rights, and Refugees, winner of the Modernist Studies Association Book Prize and a Choice Outstanding Academic Title; The Judicial Imagination: Writing After Nuremberg, which won the British Academy Rose Mary Crawshay Prize for English Literature; and the essay collection Writing and Righting: Literature in the Age of Human Rights. We Are Free to Change the World: Hannah Arendt’s Lessons in Love and Disobedience (Hogarth) was published in January 2024. She is a regular media commentator and broadcaster. She lives in London and France.

Niobe Way

[Niobe Way]
Dr. Niobe Way is Professor of Developmental Psychology and the founder of the Project for the Advancement of Our Common Humanity at New York University (PACH). She is also past President of the Society for Research on Adolescence (SRA) and co-director of the Center for Research on Culture, Development, and Education at NYU.

Her work focuses on the intersections of culture, context, and human development, with a particular focus on social and emotional development and how cultural ideologies influence developmental trajectories. The Listening Project, her current project with Joseph Nelson, Hirokazu Yoshikawa, David Kirkland, and Alisha Ali, aims to foster curiosity and connection in and outside of middle school classrooms across New York City.

In addition, she created and teaches a core course for undergraduates at NYU called The Science of Human Connection. The course describes her theoretical and empirical framework developed over three decades and discussed in her latest co-edited book The Crisis of Connection: Its Roots, Consequences, and Solution (NYU Press).
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Dr. Way has also authored nearly a hundred journal articles and books, including Deep Secrets: Boys’ Friendships and the Crisis of Connection (Harvard University Press) and Everyday Courage: The Lives and Stories of Urban Teenagers (NYU Press). Her research has been funded by the National Institute of Mental Health and numerous foundations including The National Science Foundation, The William T. Grant Foundation, The Einhorn Family Charitable Trust Foundation, and The Spencer Foundation. She is a contributor to Huffington Post, Psychology Today, and her research is regularly featured in mainstream media outlets (e.g., New York Times, NPR, Today Show, NBC). Examples include Two Cheers for Feminism! and Guys, We Have A Problem: How American Masculinity Creates Lonely Men.

Thomas Chatterton Williams

[Thomas Chatterton Williams]
Thomas Chatterton Williams is the author of Losing My Cool and Self-Portrait in Black and White. He is a staff writer at The Atlantic. Prior to that he was a contributing writer at The New York Times Magazine and a columnist at Harper’s. He is a 2022 Guggenheim fellow and a visiting fellow at AEI. His work has appeared in The New Yorker, The London Review of Books, Le Monde and many other places, and has been collected in The Best American Essays and The Best American Travel Writing. He has received support from Yaddo, MacDowell and The American Academy in Berlin, where he is a member of the Board of Trustees. He is a visiting professor of the humanities and senior fellow at the Hannah Arendt Center for Politics and Humanities at Bard College and his next book, Nothing Was the Same will be published by Knopf.

Readings

Suggested Reading List for the Conference
The full conference will be available via Live Webcast. ALL registrants will also receive the link to the live webcast.

Get ready for our stimulating conference, "Tribalism and Cosmopolitanism: How Can We Imagine a Pluralist Politics?" To make the most of this event, we've curated a suggested reading list. These readings will provide you with a rich background and deeper understanding of the themes we'll be exploring during the conference. Plus, they're a great way to get your intellectual juices flowing before the big event!  Here's what the reading list will do for you:
  • Enhance Your Experience: Gain insights and context that will enrich your participation in discussions.
  • Spark Conversations: Be prepared to engage in lively debates and thoughtful exchanges with fellow attendees.
  • Deepen Your Knowledge: Explore the complexities of tribalism and cosmopolitanism through the lens of Hannah Arendt.
We can't wait to hear your insights and see how they shape our collective understanding of pluralist politics. 
  • Arendt, Hannah. Thinking without a Banister: Essays in Understanding, 1953-1975. Edited by Jerome Kohn, Harcourt, 2018.
  • Arendt, Hannah. The Jew as Pariah: A Hidden Tradition. In: The Jewish Writings. Edited by Jerome Kohn and Ron H. Feldman. 2007.
  • Arendt, Hannah. The Jewish State: Fifty Years After, Where Have Herzl’s Politics Lead. In: The Jewish Writings. Edited by Jerome Kohn and Ron H. Feldman. 2007.
  • Arendt, Hannah. The Promise of Politics. Edited by Jerome Kohn, Schocken Books, 2005.
  • Arendt, Hannah. Responsibility and Judgment. Edited by Jerome Kohn, Schocken Books, 2003.
  • Arendt, Hannah. Continental Imperialism: The Pan Movements. In: The Origins of Totalitarianism. (chapter 8, especially I: Tribal Nationalism), 1951. 
  • Benhabib, Seyla. Another Cosmopolitanism. Oxford University Press, 2006.
  • Chua, Amy. Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations. Penguin Press, 2018. (Chapter Seven: Inequality and the Tribal Chasm in America. Chapter Eight: Democracy and Political Tribalism in America)
  • Horta, Paulo Lemos. Cosmopolitan Prejudice. In: Cosmopolitanisms, ed. By Bruce Robbins, et al. chp. 12
  • Junger, Sebastian. Tribe: On Homecoming and Belonging. Twelve, 2016.
  • Kant, Immanuel. Idea for a Universal History from a Cosmopolitan Point of View. In Perpetual Peace and Other Essays. Hackett Publishing Company, 1983.
  • O’Toole, Fintan. We don’t know ourselves. A personal history of Modern Ireland.
  • Putnam, Robert D. E Pluribus Unum: Diversity and Community in the Twenty-first Century. The 2006 Johan Skytte Prize Lecture. Scandinavian Political Studies, vol. 30, no. 2, 2007, pp. 137-174.
  • Stonebridge, Lyndsey. We Are Free to Change the World: Hannah Arendt’s Lessons in Love and Disobedience. Hogarth, 2024.
  • Way, Niobe. Rebels with a Cause: Reimagining Boys, Ourselves, and Our Culture. Dutton, 2024.
  • Weyl, E. Glen, Audrey Tang. Plurality: The Future of Technology and Democracy. Radicalxchange, 2024.
  • Williams, Thomas Chatterton. Self-Portrait in Black and White. W. W. Norton & Company, 2020.

Additional Resources and Links:
  • Benhabib, Seyla. An Open Letter to My Friends Who Signed “Philosophy For Palestine”, Nov. 4, 2023
  • Berkowitz, Roger. The Letter Wars. Amor Mundi, 11-04-2023
  • Doutout, Ross. The Myth of Cosmopolitanism, NY Times, July 2, 2016
  • Drezner, Daniel.  The Truth of Cosmopolitanism, Washington Post, July 5, 2016.

Location

How to Get to Bard

*NOTE: The full conference will be available via Live Webcast. ALL registrants will also receive the link to the live webcast.

By Car:
The Taconic State Parkway and the New York State Thruway provide the most direct routes to our campus. Click the Google link above or get directions by entering the following address into your GPS: 51 Ravine Road, Red Hook, NY 12571. 

From the East: If you are traveling from east of the Hudson River in New York State, take the Taconic State Parkway to the Red Hook / Route 199 exit, drive west on Route 199 through the village of Red Hook to Route 9G, turn right onto Route 9G, drive north 1.6 miles, turn left at the traffic light and continue on Annandale Road through our campus.

From the West: If you are traveling from west of the Hudson River, take the New York State Thruway (I-87) to exit 19 (Kingston), take Route 209 (changes to Route 199 at the Hudson River) over the Kingston-Rhinecliff Bridge to Route 9G, turn left onto Route 9G, drive north 3.5 miles, turn left at the traffic light and continue on Annandale Road through our campus.

By Train: 
There are two train stations close to Bard College: one in Poughkeepsie (Metro North), New York, and the other in Rhinecliff (Amtrak), New York. Taxi service is available from either station to bring you to campus.  

Amtrak provides service from Albany and from Pennsylvania Station in New York City to Rhinecliff, about 9 miles south of Annandale. Taxi service is available at the station. Travel Time: Approximately two hours (one hour and 40 minutes by train and 15–20 minutes by taxi). Contact Information: Rhinecliff station can be reached at 845-876-3364. Reservations and schedule information at wwe.Amtrak.com

Metro-North commuter railroad provides service from Grand Central Station in New York City to Poughkeepsie, about 26 miles south of campus. Taxi service is available at the station. Travel Time: Approximately one hour and 30 minutes (40–50 minutes by train and 40 minutes by taxi).

See here for more directions to Bard College.
 

Olin Hall

[Olin Hall]
Bard College's main campus is located in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, on the east bank of the Hudson River, about 90 miles north of New York City, 50 miles south of Albany, NY, and 220 miles southwest of Boston. The Conference takes place in Olin Auditorium in the Olin Humanities Building (C3 on the Bard Map). 

Accomodations

[Accomodations]
A comprehensive list of nearby hotels, inns, and B & B’s may be found through Dutchess County Tourism and through Ulster County Tourism. Please review these lists. We recommend booking your accommodations and restaurant dining as soon as possible. We do not offer housing options on campus for guests. There are several Air BnB options in the nearby towns; Red Hook and Tivoli. Please be prepared to use Uber, Lyft, and Taxis to get around. Note: The roads surrounding Bard College are not walkable and due to the rural area, local transport is limited. Please keep this in mind when planning your stay. Still need help? Check out visiting Bard College for more helpful hints, click here.

Local hotel offering a Bard Rate during the conference: 

The Best Western Plus in Kingston, NY.  To make reservations using the Bard discount, you must call the hotel direct at 845-338-0400 and ask for the “Bard College Discount.” (20% off) We recommend booking your accommodations as early as possible.

Parking is Free

[Parking is Free]
There are two main parking lots; One across from Olin and one south of Olin Hall -- Please park in either lot. Additionally, you may also park in the gravel lot across from the Stevenson Gymnasium off of Annandale Road. Please click HERE to see the venue map. The black objects represent Parking Lots.

Contest

CONGRATULATIONS TO OUR 2024 STUDENT JOURNALISM CONTEST WINNERS!

  • Jean Abrahams '25, first place prize
  • Hadi Aftab '27
  • Yolanda Liu '26
  • Aleksandar Vitanov '25
  • Kason Waring '26


Annual Conference Student Coverage

We are excited to invite all students to participate in covering our annual Hannah Arendt Center conference. This is a fantastic opportunity to get involved, showcase your skills, and share your unique perspective with a wider audience.

What We're Looking For:
  • a piece of writing (1 page or more) and photos OR
  • a video (edited to no more than 3 min.) OR
  • an interview with one or several conference speakers and photos 

Why Participate?

We are looking for exceptional student journalism that will inform and inspire our audience. We encourage you to submit your best work. Only submissions that demonstrate a high level of quality and relevance to our conference will be selected for publication, on one of the following two platforms:
  • Amor Mundi, our weekly newsletter that reaches thousands of members
  • HAC social media platforms (X, Instagram, Threads, Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube) which, together, reach thousands of followers
Published submissions will receive a $50 payment and the first place winner will receive a prize of $500. 

The first prize winner will be selected by a committee of HAC-affiliated professors, who will be looking for submissions of exceptional quality that address/highlight aspects of the conference theme in new and interesting ways. Photos and video should be high quality. The first place winner will be announced and published in Amor Mundi.


How to Submit:
  • Attend the conference and capture your experience through photos, writing, videos, or interviews.
  • Submit your work through this form by Friday, Oct. 25. No late submissions, one submission per person only.

  • Benefits to You:
    • Gain exposure and recognition for your work.
    • Contribute to the college community and be celebrated for your creativity.
    • Enhance your portfolio with published work.
    Don’t miss this chance to be a part of our Annual Conference and share your insights with our vibrant community. We look forward to seeing your amazing submissions!

    Questions? Contact us at [email protected]
     
    [Photo of contest winners by Joseph Nartey '26]
    Photo of contest winners by Joseph Nartey '26

    Media

    Press Inquiries
    Please contact:
    Mark Primoff, Director of Communications
    Bard College
    845-758-7412
    [email protected]

    CONFERENCE PRESS RELEASE

    COVERAGE:

    On Tribalism with Sebastian Junger, For Love of the World on Radio Kingston

    10/8/24 Special Lockbox Panel: Tribalism of Politics, The Roundtable on WAMC

    Live from the 16th Annual Hannah Arendt Conference, La Voz on Radio Kingston 

    Selected Recordings from the Conference on WXBC (Bard's student-run radio station)

    Bard College conference explores the variety of human interaction in Hudson Valley One

    Hannah Arendt Center Conference 2024: Tribalism and Cosmopolitanism, 1st Morning in Veteran AF
    This event occurred on:  OCTOBER 17-18, 2024
    WATCH THE RECORDINGS

    The Hannah Arendt Center's 16th annual fall conference will bring notable speakers to Bard College in Annandale to discuss the implications of tribalist politics just weeks before the national US election. The conference will spark important conversations and explore how to make space for loyalty and meaning while fostering a more pluralistic politics. 

    Hannah Arendt was suspicious of cosmopolitanism, world government, and the loss of the common sense connections that are part of living with and amidst one's tribe. Wary of assimilation and universalism, Arendt understood the need for a tribe, whether that tribe be her “tribe” of good friends or living amongst people with whom one shares cultural and social prejudices. At the same time, Arendt was also deeply suspicious of tribalism in politics. Politics always involves a plurality of peoples. Thus tribal nationalism—what she called the pseudo-mystical consciousness—is anti-political and leads to political programs aimed at ethnic homogeneity. 

    Arendt believed that the aspiration of politics is to bind together a plurality of persons in ways that do justice to their uniqueness and yet find what is common to them as members of a defined political community. Wary of the nation-state that would privilege the national community of the state over "foreigners" and "minorities," Arendt nevertheless opposed assimilation into a cosmopolitan sameness. Instead, she held onto a vision of politics centered around plurality and federalism, one in which homelands and regions of like-minded peoples would also live together in federalist republics that both respected the particularity of local identities and sought to build meaningful political bonds that transcend tribal sensibilities. Her plan for a federation in Israel and Palestine imagined Jewish and Palestinian homelands as part of a larger federal structure. 
     
    The rise of tribalist and populist political movements today is in part a response to the failure of cosmopolitan rule by elites around the world. As understandable as tribalism may be, the challenge today is to think of new political possibilities that allow for the meaningful commitments of tribal identities while also respecting the fact of human plurality.  The Hannah Arendt Center Conference Tribalism and Cosmopolitanism responds to the undeniable fact that tribalism is real, appealing, and dangerous. We ask:
     
    • If humans are tribal beings, how can they live in multicultural liberal societies?
    • Are experts and elites themselves simply one tribe defending their self-interests?
    • Must social media contribute to the fracturing of society into raging tribes?
    • Is there a common interest in society knowable through reason?
    •What is a tribe and is it a useful word in our political vocabulary?
    •Is there an alternative to the cosmopolitan tribalism of global elites?
    Above all, we ask, how can make a space for tribal loyalty and tribal meaning while at the same time maintain our commitment to pluralist politics?


    The full conference will be available via Live Webcast. ALL registrants will also receive the link to the live webcast.
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