International Interdisciplinary Workshop
Online | 27 - 28 August 2026
When we want to convince others of our beliefs, we usually offer arguments, and, crucially, evidence. Sometimes this evidence is mundane and undisputed; more often it is complex, contested, or ambiguous. But what happens when claims concern phenomena that, by their very nature, resist empirical verification?
Photographs of flying saucers, leaked documents allegedly exposing global conspiracies, first-person accounts of alien abductions or divine visions, yeti footprints, testimonies of spirit communication, rattling tables and flickering lights in séances: in many discourses, evidence is central to credibility even when no evidence in the strict “scientific” sense can exist. Yet such claims are rarely presented as groundless. Instead, elaborate forms of justification, authentication, and evidential reasoning emerge.
This workshop explores how evidence is constructed, negotiated, and evaluated in discourses about phenomena that inherently evade empirical proof. This is particularly timely, as recent political and technological developments are reshaping narratives, demanding renewed scrutiny of how evidence is framed, contested, and weaponized.
Thus, in this workshop we ask how different communities define what counts as evidence, which semiotic, linguistic, narrative, and material resources they mobilise, and how these practices interact with broader cultural, political, and media environments
The workshop is explicitly interdisciplinary and invites contributions from, among others:
We are particularly interested in how these perspectives can be brought into dialogue and where their analytical tools converge, or clash.
To foster focused yet comparative discussion, the workshop will be structured around four thematic clusters. Each cluster will bring together scholars from different disciplines working on related phenomena:
Across all clusters, we are interested in questions such as:
This will be a small, intensive workshop designed to prioritise discussion and exchange over lengthy presentations. Contributions will take the form of short, focused papers, followed by extended discussion sessions and cross-thematic roundtables.
A central aim of the workshop is to explore how interdisciplinary cooperation on the construction of evidence can be meaningfully organized across disciplines, objects of study, and methodological traditions. The workshop provides an ideal setting for launching this longer-term interdisciplinary conversation.
We invite submissions of abstracts (up to 300 words, excluding references) for our upcoming workshop.
Please submit your abstract by 15 May 2026 to m.polato@mmu.ac.uk and lucia.assenzi@ph-tirol.ac.at
Notifications of acceptance will be sent by 15 June 2026.
We look forward to your contributions!