Memorial Calendar

The Calendar is a concise place to post all pertinent dates for friends and family. As new items are scheduled, you check here often to stay up to date with upcoming events.

  • The Quickening Pendulum: Capitalism and the Long-Duree (Session[s] In Honor of Giovanni Arrighi)

    April 14, 2010 12:00 PM - April 18, 2010 12:00 PM

    Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers (details will be posted when settled by organizers), , Washington DC

    Call for Papers: The Quickening Pendulum: Capitalism and the Long-Duree (Session[s] In Honor of Giovanni Arrighi) Annual Meeting of the Association of American Geographers (AAG) Washington DC, 14-18 April 2010 Sponsored by the Economic Geography Specialty Group and the Socialist/Critical Geography Specialty Group Co-organized by Laurel Mei Turbin, Steve McFarland, Francesca Manning, and Jesse Goldstein (CUNY Graduate Center, NYC) Possibility of Multiple Sessions, Panel and Paper We have recently lost an important thinker, Giovanni Arrighi, whose legacy lives on in innumerable works that continue to vitally influence the fields of economic, political, and critical geography. This panel seeks to pay tribute to Arrighi through an engagement with those dimensions of radical political economy most indebted to his work. The importance of such work is paramount in this historical moment, where we find ourselves in need of a deep understanding of capital's crises in order to make sense of this juncture and move forward from it. Capital is at present mired in a militarized financial crisis that threatens the very reproducibility of its long term cycles of creative destruction, and which seems poised to irrevocably transform the uneven geography of the 21st century. We seek papers that attempt a critical analysis of capitalism with emphasis on its long and medium term transformations. Questions of crisis theory will be considered, as well as studies which explore the changing roles of specific elements in capitalist society over the last several or several hundred years of capitalist development (for instance, land, real estate, employment, uprisings, state or government intervention, class struggle). Papers might focus on issues such as, financialization productivity and profit rates oscillations between "economic freedom" and "economic regulation" and between "intensive" and "extensive" development signal crises and terminal crises prospects (or lack thereof) for a new systemic cycle of accumulation, e.g., the rise of new hegemons Session organizers seek to incorporate into our discussion the perspectives of women, people of color, and others addressing issues of crisis from subjugated viewpoints, as well as scholars incorporating feminist and third world geographical frameworks to strengthen a historical understanding and critique of capitalism, in its necessary co-constitution with historical manifestations of race, gender, sexuality. We encourage such scholars to submit their work (though do not intend to limit submissions in this way). We have left this call for papers intentionally broad, in recognition of the far reaching influence that Arrighi’s work has had in many fields of critical geography. We welcome any and all papers whose ongoing interrogation of capital’s dynamics serve as a tribute to this important thinker. Please send 250 word abstracts to fmanning (at) gc.cuny.edu by October 20. Info on submitting to AAG: http://www.aag.org/annualmeetings/2010/papers.htm Email: fmanning@gc.cuny.edu

  • A Celebration of the Life of Giovanni Arrighi

    April 16, 2010 4:00 PM

    Binghamton University, , Binghamton, NY 13902

    Friends: On behalf of the Sociology Department we invite you to join us in celebrating the life of Giovanni Arrighi on Friday April 16, 2010. For over 20 years Giovanni was a cherished member of our community, as has been made so evident in the many tributes and conversations that we have heard since his passing. We hold this meeting to bring together and share these personal remembrances, and commemorate his life as a group of his friends (a conference on his work will be organized later by Beverly and others). We plan to have a series of personal tributes from 4 to 6 pm to be followed by a reception. We encourage people, especially those unable to come to Binghamton in April, to send short messages about their experiences with and memories of Giovanni. Please RSVP to Denise Chewens, the Sociology Department Administrative Assistant at dchewens@binghamton.edu by March 1, 2010 if you are planning to attend the reception. For people coming from out of town, a block of rooms at concessional rates have been arranged at Quality Inn, Vestal (the former Holiday Inn on Vestal Parkway) at $79.95 a night for a King or a Double room. Please contact the hotel directly at or 607-729-6371 before April 1, 2010 to get the concessional rate and mention that the Group is "Sociology – Arrighi Memorial." Bill Martin Ravi Palat