2009 Archive

Bellarmine Forum 2009
Vulnerability: Windows to the Human Condition
Directors
Roberto Dell’Oro, Professor, Theological Studies
Bill Fulco, S.J., National Endowment for the Humanities Professor of
Ancient Mediterranean Studies
Vulnerability is an intrinsic part of the human condition; arising from
the nature of human existence itself, it shapes our understanding of
life, community, and God. And yet, although a universal dimension of
human existence, vulnerability remains mostly hidden behind the mask of
our “will to power”; we tend to disguise our own personal
vulnerabilities, whether physical or moral, often playing a dangerous
game of deception, of which we, eventually, become the victims. We also
struggle to improve our human condition as a whole, overcoming
diseases, devising new therapies, and searching for powerful remedies in
the pursuit of ultimate happiness. Science and technology, driven by
an expanding market of sellable images available for public consumption,
push us to “perfect” our bodies through ever sophisticated and invasive
forms of cosmetic surgeries. In the meantime, medical research, often
with questionable public consensus and not without financial incentives,
seeks new avenues for experimentation on human beings and the
engineering of genes, tissues, and organs. Most paradoxically, such
pursuits of perfection coexist with wider manifestations of collective
vulnerability: the handicapped and mentally impaired, the poor and
socially disenfranchised still haunt our dreams of power and security
like a nightmare, awaking our own imagination and creativity to the
crude reality of the vulnerability we will always have with us, indeed
within us. What if vulnerability, rather than “will to power”, was to
be that which makes us truly human? How would such a realization
re-orient our aspirations, how would it change our
being-in-the-world-with-others and inspire our generosity, how would it
define our relationship to God?
We are proposing Vulnerability: Windows to the Human Condition as the
topic for the 2009 edition of the Bellarmine Forum. We believe this
topic has the potential to meet the expectations for the Forum because
the theme of vulnerability has a profound existential meaning. The
conceptual exploration of vulnerability is, virtually, endless and will
open up interesting opportunities for interaction among disciplines and
departments. Topics to be explored will include children with special
needs (inspired to some degree by the large involvement of our student
body with the “Special Games”); youth, amongst them especially
minorities, who are caught up in the legal system; a whole day devoted
to the “lost children of Africa,” and finally a day on addiction: not
just alcoholism, but substance addiction, pornography and computer
addiction, even “texting” addiction. The final Saturday will largely
be devoted to art and performance with special displays in our
galleries.
We will ask: What does it mean to confront those concrete experiences of
vulnerability? How do such experiences feed into the perception of our
own metaphysical contingency, i.e., that we are, yet we could also not
be? How does our own vulnerability, whether recognized in itself or
disguised as will to power, carry with it specific images of God, of his
power or, conversely, his vulnerability and weakness? And again, how do
we strike a balance between accepting vulnerability and striving to
overcome it? How do we discern between “resistance and surrender”,
effort and consent?
The format will avoid overlapping sessions. Mornings will be more
issue-oriented and will have an address by an expert followed by a panel
discussion, largely with LMU faculty. Our Lost Children of Africa day
will draw on the eloquence and experience of our residential scholar
and Nobel Prize winner Wole Soyinka from Nigeria. Afternoons will focus
on more experiential presentations, mostly by those who experience
vulnerability directly. Each evening there will be a special event:
keynote speaker, film, play or the like, and a reception. Our goal is
to engage the students and faculty more than outsiders, so we are
trying to speak to their personal experience and hearts as well as to
their minds.
We certainly welcome, and in fact solicit, your suggestions for the
Forum and offers of your participation in any capacity. We think this
Forum will be a fine venue for interfaculty dialogue as well as a source
of new information and shared experiences.
With generous support from: