Critical Times 2026: Bodies

International summer school organised by the Institute for Interdisciplinary Legal Studies - lucernaiuris

Datum: 6. – 10. Juli 2026
Ort: University of Lucerne, Room 3.A05

“Why all the fuss about the body?” Caroline Bynum first posed this provocation in the mid-1990s, prompted by a “proliferation” of new writings and theorizations, including then-recent and now-classic works by Judith Butler, bell hooks and Susan Bordo. Looking back some three decades on, we see that the ‘fuss’ was no temporary flare-up or mere passing fad. Rather, it was symptomatic of an emergent ‘bodily turn’ that has, in the years since, moved the terminology of bodies – real, imagined and metaphorical – to the foreground of critical thinking across law and the humanities.

The fruits of this turn need no special elaboration. Interventions in critical theory, performance studies, affect theory, Black studies, feminist and queer theory, posthumanism and new materialist studies have given us an array of new vocabularies and insights to bring to bear on our thinking about bodies, their meanings, entanglements and limits. The body, in Rizvana Bradley’s phrase, has become a “discursive meeting ground” for an “unwieldy multitude of concepts and debates, affects and afflictions, conflicts and contestations”, the distinctive expressions of which span multiple fields, disciplines and cultures. While not always clear whether these numerous articulations work in tandem or at cross-purposes, they have, in their very plurality, fostered a deeper engagement with, and problematization of, the “matter of bodies” (Butler). Our present moment – marked by demographic convulsions, war, enhanced practices of surveillance, ubiquitous mobile media, posthuman subjectivities, and new forms of political protest and social movements – urges us, meanwhile, to ‘fuss’ further: to give continued and renewed care to re/thinking the significance of bodies in various contexts, situations and relations. Or to ask more pointedly: do bodies still matter? And if so, why, when and how? 

In this spirit, the 2026 Critical Times summer school invites emerging scholars in law and the humanities to gather anew around the theme of ‘Bodies’. Together, we will think about bodies that assemble and disassemble, that appear and disappear, that are protected, punished, cared for, and ignored. From the vulnerable to the resistant, the human to the more-than-human, we ask how legal and cultural frameworks make some bodies visible and others invisible – and how embodiment, performance and affect shape and unsettle our legal imaginaries. 

Open to postdocs, PhDs and advanced graduate students from different disciplinary and interdisciplinary backgrounds, the aim is to create a live and lively space of inquiry and creativity – a temporary assembly of thinking, feeling, and embodied scholarship. 

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