Dear Colleagues,
The call for papers is out for EASA2026 (21-24 July 2026) in Poznań and
we would like to invite you to submit your paper proposals for our panel
titled 'Immunitarian politics: rethinking the contours of self and
other, exclusion and community'.
https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/easa2026/p/18426
If you work with or around the concept of immunity in the context of
global health, multispecies entanglements, politics, care, and
community, either as a mode of exclusion, protection, or vulnerability,
we encourage you to propose a paper. Please feel free to share this call
with your students, colleagues and friends who might be interested.
Please find the EASA2026 paper submission guidelines below, the deadline is January 26:
https://easaonline.org/easa-conference/easa2026/call-for-papers/
See the details of the panel below and do not hesitate to get in touch
if you have any questions. And apologies for cross-posting.
Best wishes,
Antonia Modelhart (University of Vienna), Lisa Lehner (University of Vienna), and Zsófi
Bacsadi (Central European University)
Link to the panel and paper proposals:
https://nomadit.co.uk/conference/easa2026/p/18426
Short Abstract
This panel explores "immunity" as a dynamic concept and metaphor in
anthropology and beyond. We invite contributions that examine its
shifting meanings in the context of global health, multispecies
entanglements, politics, care, and community, fostering critical and
theoretical engagement.
Long Abstract
With the COVID-19 pandemic, Roberto Esposito’s concepts of immunitas and
communitas (2008, 2010, 2013) gained traction in anthropology, and more
widely in philosophy and political theory as well. Current developments
in global and planetary health such as antimicrobial resistance,
vaccine hesitancy and inequity, skepticism towards science, imbalances
of public and private investments in biomedical R&D highlight the
pertinence of these wider concepts.
Immunity as a concept and metaphor shifting away from antagonism can
shed light on the intricacies of multispecies entanglements (between
humans and non-human others, pests, microbes), reactionary politics
(xenophobia, anti-migrant backlash), but could equally serve as the
basis for grasping forms of patient advocacy, demands for access to
health, to pharmaceuticals, and to care. Immunity might also be seen as
xenophilic; inherently in relation with the other and transforming
boundaries of the self (Napier 2017).
We encourage theoretical and conceptual engagement with immunity as a
site of tension, transformation, and negotiation: how has immunity been
redefined in light of global pandemics, environmental crises, and
technological advancements? What are the implications of immunity as a
metaphor for exclusion, protection, or vulnerability? How do different
cultural, historical, and political frameworks shape our understanding
of immunity?
We invite contributions and case studies from various fields of
anthropology that understand immunity elastically: engagements with the
porous borders of public and private, inside and outside, self and
other, with different species, changing ideas of the common and the
emergence of novel conditions for exclusion, alienation, as well as for
care and community.