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Mimetic Studies: New Theoretical Steps for the Mimetic (Re-)Turn

Type: Virtual

Description

Located at the juncture of philosophy and the arts, mimesis is one of the most ancient concepts of literary theory and may not initially appear new, let alone original. It was indeed marginalized and forgotten in the Romantic and modernist periods, haunted by the myth of originality. Yet, in recent years, scholars across the humanities, social sciences, and even the neurosciences, have returned to the ancient, yet strikingly contemporary, realization that humans are an imitative species, or homo mimeticus (www.homomimeticus.eu).

Taking the study of all too human, posthuman, and nonhuman forms of imitation beyond its traditional confines within aesthetic realism and mimetic desires, influential figures in continental philosophy (Nancy, Malabou), literary theory (Miller), feminism (Cavarero, Butler), political theory (Connolly), New Materialism (Bennet), posthuman studies (Hayles), history of psychology (Borch-Jacobsen), the neurosciences (Gallese) and more, have joined forces across disciplines to promote a “mimetic (re-)turn” attentive to the relational, embodied, plastic, contagious, resonant, and mirroring (im)properties of a chameleon species (see for instance Homo Mimeticus I and II).

The goal of this panel is to engage productively, critically and creatively with the mimetic (re-)turn to both deepen and further the transdisciplinary field of mimetic studies. We are especially interested in the contemporary conceptual masks of mimesis that enable us to further explore the two “faces” of mimesis that go beyond good and evil: understood as a vibrant affect that destabilizes the boundaries of individuation, mimesis on the one hand generates life-negating pathologies and, on the other hand, produces life-affirmative patho-logies. We welcome contributions to new mimetic studies across different disciplines and theoretical schools, including but not limited to:

Modernist mimesis (phantom egos, homo duplex, crowd behavior)
Postmodernist mimesis (pastiche, intertextuality, simulation)
Mimesis in postcritique & affect theory (identification, apprehension, attunement)
(New) fascist mimesis (myth, disinformation, post-truth)
Mimetic posthumanism (hypermimesis, AI simulations, homo mimeticus 2.0)
After post-poststructuralist mimesis (Derrida, Irigaray, Lacoue-Labarthe, Nancy, Lawtoo)
Mimicry after Critical Theory (Benjamin, Adorno, Fromm, Jameson)
New materialist mimesis (contagion, influx & efflux, entangled humanism, “flesh”)
Gendered mimesis & mimetic inclinations (Irigaray, Butler, Cavarero, Ahmed)
Mimetic resonance (Rosa)
Imitation & neuroscience (mirror neurons, plasticity, epigenetic mimesis)
Mimesis and (literary) selfhood (life writing, autofiction, relating narratives, autotheory)
Mimicry, interculturality, decolonization
Suggestive mimesis (mimetic unconscious, hypnosis, empathy, influence)
Biomimicry and metamorphosis (beyond human/nonhuman mimesis)

Schedule

Friday, May 30, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

Becoming-Other through Mimesis: The Tradition of Mimicry in Modernist Literature
Joshua Elwer
Reading for Resonance: The Agency of Friendship
Curtis Gruenler
Spiraling Out of Hand: Story of the Eye and the Mimetic Unconscious
Menno Lenting
The Resistance to Metaphor: Between Mimesis and Metamorphosis in Contemporary Poetry by Natalie Diaz and Yu Jian
Siyu Xie
Saturday, May 31, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

Mimo(n)tologies: the scenic life of concepts
Kemal Sultanov
Indian Parasites and Contagious Media: A Study of a Divided Nation under a State of Exception
Asijit Datta
Mimesis, Nomadic Thought, and Postdiasporic Dispersion
Fatima Festic
Witnessing the Contemporary: The Aesthetization of Politics and Meme-esis
Benjamin Schoonenberg
Sunday, June 1, 2025
10:30 AM CDT - 12:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms

Papers

Homo-mēnsus, Homo-mimeticus, Homo-mēnsūra
Shan Wu
“Now What?”: Deconstruction, Mimesis, and the End of Liber Mundi
Jacob Levi
Mimesis and Biosemiotics: The Paradox of Relational Dynamics in Ecological Systems
Mickey Vallee
From Hypermimesis to Hyperperformativity: How AI Reshapes the Human
Philip Michels
Mirror Neurons and the Response to Images: Mimesis in the Work of Georges Didi-Huberman
Stijn De Cauwer
Sunday, June 1, 2025
12:30 PM CDT - 2:15 PM CDT
Room: 2025 Annual Meeting > Conference Rooms