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Who Gets the Remainder? The Ethics and Politics of Gleaning

November 5, 2022

12:00 am

AD White House

With this workshop, we focus on gleaning: the widely practiced but long under-theorized right of the poor to take harvest remainders. More than simply the action of destitute people scavenging food, gleaning has been explicitly codified as entitlement and obligation: Leviticus not only entitles the poor to glean after the reapers, but obligates field owners to “not reap to the edge” of their fields, to leave for “the poor and the foreign.” Positing the right of the excluded in terms of the leftover, gleaning is fundamentally feudal: it premises aegis and common provision on the basis of changeless inequality; it formulates welfare in terms of an “excess” that must not be recirculated back into homogenous surplus value. Taking this feudal category as a lens onto our late-liberal world, this workshop asks how gleaning persists today. We invite economic and cultural anthropologists, legal scholars, theologians, historians and activists to discuss such well documented practices as scavenging, moonlighting, hacking, pilfering and coin-shaving with attention to that which is claimed as the leftover. Ultimately, we ask: how do people lay claim to aegis, social provision and their right to a commons today, through and despite liberal idioms of civic equality, lawfulness and smooth circulation?

Featuring papers by Amiel Bize, David Boarder Giles, Daniel Caner, Xenia Cherkaev, Catherine Fennell, Vinay Gidwani, Cristiano Lanzano, Peter Linebaugh, Tamta Khalvashi, Lori Khatchadourian, Gustav Peebles, and Bettina Stoetzer

As well as presentations on enclosure and access in publishing with Eileen Frandenburg Joy of Punctum Books and Ramsey Kanaan of PM Press.

Workshop schedule: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1SbIMOAlnzK_qeAkpCHdmpU01U3eNI9jk/ed…(link is external)

Events sponsored by the Wenner-Gren Foundation and the Anthropology Department, and co-sponsored by the Society for the Humanities, the Department of Comparative Literature, the Department of History, and the Institute for European Studies.

Additional Information

Program

Institute for European Studies