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International Conference: „Queer Tosquelles-Anti-Fascism, Vagabonding Psychiatry, Non-Identitarian Lives“

21. Mai 2024 10:30 22. Mai 2024 18:00

Queer Studies KMH presents the International Conference: QUEER TOSQUELLES – Anti-Fascism, Vagabonding Psychiatry, Non-Identitarian Lives:

QUEER TOSQUELLES will engage with the history of revolutionary, anti-fascist psychiatric practices and their involvement in ways of fleeing and resisting since the 1920s in Spain, France, Italy, and Germany. The international conference will focus on the practices of Catalan/French psychiatrist François Tosquelles (1912–1994), who influenced Félix Guattari, Frantz Fanon and many others – from institutional analysis to political philosophy.
Tosquelles is still largely unknown in Germany. For some years now, however, a lively reception has been taking place in the art field, especially in Spain and France, with large archival and research exhibitions, catalogues and films. The conference at the KHM will bring together researchers and artists working on the genealogies of Tosquelles’s manifold surrounds and exploring the potentials of his practice today. Here, queerness emerges in many facets: through Tosquelles’s insistence on the deconstruction of the nuclear family and the importance of other forms of making kin, through the various rhythms of vagabonding, through the weird, the strange, the non-sensical and the non-normalized, through a political philosophy of multiplicity, through a queering practice that traverses all non-identitarian forms of life.

Kunsthochschule für Medien Köln
Aula of the KHM
Filzengraben 2, 50676 Köln
Free entrance.
In English – no online attendance or livestream available.
Find the full programme here.

With Janna Graham, Carles Guerra, Isabell Lorey, Angela Melitopoulos, Stefan Nowotny, Anne Querrien, Gerald Raunig, Wanderley Santos, Francesco Salvini, Henning Schmidgen, Elena Vogman.
Organized by Isabell Lorey, Anna Bromley, Konstantin Butz, Lilian Haberer, Katrin M. Kämpf, Mary Mikaelyan, Maren Mildner, Stefan Nowotny, Heidi Pfohl.
In cooperation with the European Institute for Progressive Cultural Policies (eipcp)