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On the Pulse : Explorations in the Social Sciences

17 March 2022
12.00pm – 1.00pm AEDT
Online
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Margo Lowy, Deborah Barros Leal Farias and Mary Zournazi for On the Pulse event

"Little Fires Everywhere”: Reese Witherspoon, Motherhood & Maternal Ambivalence | 17 March 2022

Dr Margo Lowy draws on Reese Witherspoon’s character, Elena, in the television mini series “Little Fires Everywhere” to question and reflect on the taboo areas of the mother’s life and how silences surface in her experience of maternal ambivalence. This showcase trawls taboo areas such as the mother who never wanted her child, the mother who lives vicariously through her child and the mother’s experience of her hateful feelings. Questions of contemporary media and mothering are explored, such as: How are mothers presented in the current media? Is this a genuine representation? Have expectations about mothering changed? Do we identify with Elena? This conversation will disrupt our pre-conceived views about mothering from a psychic and social perspective.


"Radical Right Populism and the Politics of Cruelty: The Case of COVID-19 in Brazil Under President Bolsonaro" | 5 September 2022

Dr Deborah Barros Leal Farias explores cruelty under populism, focusing on radical right populism. She develops her argument by introducing a two-dimensional model of cruel behaviour in politics, in which cruelty is conceptualized as a dependent variable defined in terms of empathy (how the leader addresses those who suffer) and action (how the leader acts to alleviate suffering). This framework provides a nuanced understanding of how cruelty and populism connect, providing an original and cutting-edge contribution to both bodies of work. A two-dimensional model of cruel behaviour is used to shed light on the different ways radical right populists (RRP) embrace cruelty as part of their political strategies. She has come to three “ideal” types of RRP cruel behaviour: downplaying, blaming, and conspiring. In order to advance our ideas, she relies on the qualitative analysis of Brazil's far-right populist President Jair Bolsonaro and his (in)actions regarding COVID-19, who once asked about the soaring number of dead from COVID-19 simply answered: “So what? What do you want me to do?.” Using this case study, she empirically illustrates different ways in which how cruelty can manifest itself in practice and what real-life consequences it can have.

Speakers
Mary Zournazi

Mary Zournazi

Mary Zournazi is an Australian film maker and cultural philosopher. Her multi-awarding winning documentary Dogs of Democracy was screened worldwide, and her most recent documentary film, My Rembetika Blues is a story about love, life and music. She is the author of several books including Hope – New Philosophies for Change, Inventing Peace with the German filmmaker Wim Wenders, and her most recent book is Justice and Love – a philosophical dialogue with Rowan Williams. She teaches in the sociology and anthropology program at UNSW Sydney in the School of Social Sciences.

Photo credit Effy Alexakis.

Margo Lowy

Margo Lowy

Margo Lowy is a psychotherapist with an interest in mothering and women’s reproductive health. She completed her doctorate and her research masters at the UNSW in Sydney investigating the fields of maternal ambivalence and infertility. She is an adjunct lecturer in the School of Social Sciences in the Faculty of Arts, Design and Architecture at UNSW Sydney.

Dr Deborah Barros Leal Farias

Dr Deborah Barros Leal Farias

Deborah Barros Leal Farias is a Brazilian-born Senior Lecturer at UNSW Sydney's School of Social Sciences, where she teaches Politics and International Relations. She has a multidisciplinary background: PhD in Political Science from UBC (Canada), as well as an MA in International Relations, and bachelor degrees in Economy and in Law from Brazilian institutions. Her current main areas of interest involve international organizations, Brazilian politics, and populism.