Warwick Institute of Engagement (WIE) present three public lectures on philosophical ideas of Difference, Authenticity and Love. All will be delivered by Warwick’s Professor Alex Sharpe.
Each will draw on David Bowie, one of the most significant artists of the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Bowie will function as a conduit, a lightening rod, serving to bring the ideas to life. The lectures promise to be an audio-visual feast, accompanied by Bowie text, images, and music from his back catalogue.
Each will be of 45 minutes duration and will be followed by a Q&A with Alex. For more information on Alex click here
Public Lecture 2: On Authenticity
Authenticity: what a drag!
(Wednesday 8th March 2023)
This lecture will consider the idea of authenticity and its assumed relationship to truth. David Bowie has often been accused of being inauthentic, false, a phoney. Yet, compared to most of his contemporaries and successors, the lecture will argue, it is Bowie’s art and music that are the more truthful. In defending this claim, the lecture will, drawing on philosopher, Simon Critchley, distinguish truth from authenticity and argue the latter is an illusion. It is Bowie, rock’s first postmodern rock star, who, precisely because he is self-consciously inauthentic, comes closest to capturing this truth. While singer songwriters, like John Martyn, Neil Young and Joni Mitchell, sought to penetrate audiences with their truths, Bowie effaced himself, preferring fragmented lyrics/music and multi-interpretation, and fans recognized themselves in the gaps that peppered his words, sounds and visions, in the spaces between melody and cacophony.
Public Lecture 3: On Love
Bowie Love: beyond law
(Date TBC)
This lecture, which forms part of the Warwick Resonate Festival, will consider the idea of love as agape, a Greco-Christian term capturing the idea of a love for humanity. It will be argued it is this love that cascades through Bowie’s work. In thinking through Bowie love, the lecture will draw on philosophers, Max Scheler and Alain Badiou, as well as fierce opponent of Agape, Friedrich Nietzsche. The lecture will explore three love lessons apparent in Bowie’s work: love as letting go, love as humility, and love as posthuman. However, it will begin by explaining how Bowie subverted social norms which parade as necessity, and therefore, how Bowie love is inextricably tied up with freedom, yours and mine.
More details and booking to come
Professor Sharpe has presented public lectures on ideas and David Bowie at cinemas, theatres and festivals in the UK, Australia and the USA (2016-2022). These include the Dublin David Bowie Festival (2020 and 2021). She has also participated in panel discussions on the importance of Bowie with, among others, Woody Woodmansey, the legendary drummer in Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars. She is the author of several books, including, and most recently, David Bowie Outlaw: essays on difference, authenticity, ethics, art & love (London: Routledge, 2022) https://www.routledge.com/David-Bowie-Outlaw-Essays-on-Difference-Authenticity-Ethics-Art--Love/Sharpe/p/book/9780367691066