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du 17 février 2026 au 30 novembre 2026

This talk interrogates the museum’s longstanding prohibition against touch and the assumptions about care, preservation, and risk that underpin it. Disability artists have increasingly turned to haptic practices—inviting, requiring, or complicating touch—to unsettle institutional norms that equate access with translation rather than transformation. Through case studies of contemporary disability art practices, the talk explores how touch functions as a politicized encounter that redistributes responsibility between institutions and publics. Rather than positioning touch as a threat to the artwork or an exception granted to disabled visitors, these practices insist on touch as a legitimate mode of engagement that exposes whose bodies are protected, whose are disciplined, and whose are excluded within cultural spaces. The talk concludes by proposing touch as a form of institutional critique that demands new models of care, accountability, and access beyond visual dominance.
Link: meet.google.com/cyr-ynnq-vpt
November 2026
The aim of this talk is to underscore the importance of touch in Proust’s À la recherche du temps perdu, a facet of the novel that has been hardly attended to by both Proust scholarship and philosophies of touch, despite the fact that touch bookends the novel – so prevalent in the first volume Du côté de chez Swann and retuning in full force in the final volume Le temps retrouvé. As will be discussed, in the novel, and not only for the narrator but also for other characters such as Swann, it is through touch that one makes sense of existence, that one learns of limits in existence, and that one might even come to transcend them. In this regard, I argue that touch constitutes the first and last philosophy of Proust’s novel.
The goal of the TACT network (Touch, Arts, Affects) is to interrogate the experience of touch across arts and media. With speakers from various disciplines and areas of expertise, we intend to discuss the elusive tactility of the arts in relation to technology, science, ethics, politics, and everyday life. The fourth series of the webinar will more specifically address touch in history, disability aesthetics, and literature.
Though long considered as a minor sense, touch is now reclaimed as the “first sense” (Fulkerson), which defines intersubjectivity from embryonic formation to social interactions. The main hypothesis of this seminar is that touch constitutes a primordial dimension of aesthetic experience—and cannot, as such, be reduced to the language of affect. When texts, films, dances or performances touch us, how do they mobilise haptics—even when there is apparently no actual contact? Didier Anzieu’s psychoanalytical concept of the skin-ego, theorised after Freud’s early work on “contact barriers,” revalued the epidermis as a founding affective boundary. The recent discovery of C-tactile afferents in neurobiology has subsequently renewed the understanding of “affective touch” (McGlone), now conceived of as a physiological category distinct from discriminative touch. In dialogue, but also in contradistinction with the science of affective touch, this seminar defends the ability of the arts and the humanities to register tactile experiences, to retrace their genealogies, and to imagine haptic futures.
The singularity of the tactile sense lies in its reflexivity—one is touched when one touches (Husserl, Merleau-Ponty). Focusing on the ethics and politics of this chiasm, this seminar foregrounds the ability of haptic aesthetics to disrupt and remodel relationality. From Marinetti’s utopian “Manifesto of Tactilism” to Jan Švankmajer’s tactile collages, from the transgender craft of “the handmade” (Vaccaro) to “touchscreen archaeologies” (Strauven), from the “shared motricity” of contact improvisation (Bigé) to the body-centered medium of performance, touch produces aesthetic dissensus. Tactile experience also materialises acute forms of vulnerability—“hapticality, the touch of the undercommons” (Moten and Harney). Haptics alerts us to shared conditions of exposure and embodied forms of exclusion, even as it opens up concrete modalities of care (Puig de la Bellacasa). In our technological “age of excarnation” (Kearney), what can the arts and the humanities remind us about our own skins?
Works cited
mise à jour le 20 février 2026

