Living in a Precarious World

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The Lannan Spring Literary Symposium and Festival (new window) is an annual event series that welcomes artists, journalists, poets and other intellectuals from Georgetown University, the DC Metro area and abroad to discuss social and cultural topics pertinent to present time. The Symposia are free and open to the public, with no RSVP required, unless specified otherwise.
The Kalmanovitz Initiative for Labor and the Working Poor is co-sponsoring the 2014 Lannan Spring Literary Symposium and Festival, Living in a Precarious World (new window).

Living in a Precarious World
March 31 – April 1, 2014

The “fear of falling” that Barbara Ehrenreich diagnosed among the middle class 25 years ago has now become ordinary lived experience, and precarity has become the new norm. Poverty continues to increase, even as the unemployment rate slowly falls. This reflects a broader set of economic changes as secure employment disappears and many find only low-wage, temporary, contingent jobs. Young people are encouraged to go to college, but recent graduates too often find themselves unemployed or, at best, underemployed, while other spend years in prison, caught in the tide of mass incarceration, only to find themselves practically barred from employment and housing upon release. Older workers struggle to find new jobs after being displaced, and tens of thousands who were laid off during the “Great Recession” have still not found work. Meanwhile, income inequality in the United States continues to grow.

In response to the rise of precarity, artists, journalists, activists, and academics have debated the larger stakes and implications of this new “precariat.” How does the struggle to get by shape our lives, our relationships, and our social institutions? How do we challenge the rise of precarity, and what, if anything, does it offer as the basis for resistance? “Living in a Precarious World” will explore these questions through commentary, fiction, poetry, and interactive performance.

Click here (new window) for more information.