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In this seminar Sarah Winter (Professor of English and Comparative Literary and Cultural Studies at the University of Connecticut, and Co-Director of the Research Program on Humanitarianism at the UConn Human Rights Institute) addresses the use of the state of nature motif by opponents of slavery and the slave trade including Ottobah Cugoano, Olaudah Equiano and Thomas Clarkson. The talk provides a crucial corrective to the common assumption that the state of nature motif is an overwhelmingly conservative and imperial tool, serving only to justify colonisation and slavery. The talk is followed by Q&A which touches on questions of the emancipatory potential of the state of nature motif, the contribution of female authors to the state of nature literature, animality as a locus of freedom and equality, and Professor Winter's current and future work in the area of state of nature theories.
A video version of the seminar is available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_jdM3i3kHCs&ab_channel=SocialContractResearchNetwork
The seminar took place over Zoom on 13 September 2022, and was hosted by Christopher Watkin (Monash University), as part of the Australian Research Council funded Future Fellowship project "Rewriting the Social Contract: Technology, Ecology, Extremism". This seminar is an initiative of the Social Contract Research Network. To find out more about the SCRN, and to subscribe to email updates, please visit https://www.monash.edu/arts/languages-literatures-cultures-linguistics/social-contract-research-network
To be notified when future seminars, conversations and interviews are uploaded, you can subscribe to te SCRN YouTube channel by clicking on this link: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCq7geWYdmGE3kIcJrw8Ebsw?sub_confirmation=1