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[eccr] CFP: Insides, Outsides and Elsewheres

Mon Apr 04 06:53:46 GMT 2005


>Call for Papers (please circulate):
>
>
>
>"Insides, Outsides and Elsewheres"
>
>Canadian Association of Cultural Studies (CACS)
>
>October 20 - 22, 2005
>
>Submission Deadline: May 31, 2005
>
>
>
>The Canadian Association of Cultural Studies invites you to join us at
>the University of Alberta Telus Conference Centre in Edmonton Alberta,
>October 20 - 22, 2005.
>
>
>
>We are now accepting abstracts of 150 words for our conference
>entitled: "Insides, Outsides and Elsewheres". To elicit and address the
>wide range of work being done under the rubric of cultural studies, we
>are including both themed and non-themed sessions in this call for
>papers. The list of themed sessions is included below.
>
>
>
>Please note that if you are submitting an abstract to a themed session
>you must submit directly to the identified session organizer by May 31,
>2005. If you are submitting an abstract to the open call for papers
>please direct them, by the same date, to: (cacs /at/ ualberta.ca) or by mail
>to:
>
>
>
>Canadian Association of Cultural Studies (CACS)
>
>c/o Department of Educational Policy Studies
>7-104 Education North
>University of Alberta
>Edmonton, AB, T6G 2G5
>
>
>
>Abstracts may not be sent to both a themed session as well as the open
>call. Electronic submissions are preferred, but hard-copy abstracts are
>also accepted. Papers should be no longer than 15-20 minutes long, and
>presenters must be members of CACS by the time of the conference.
>Membership information and registration will be available at the
>conference and is also accessible on our website at
>www.culturalstudies.ca.
>
>
>
>Please send all other inquiries to CACS at (cacs /at/ ualberta.ca) or (780)
>492-0773.
>
>
>
>The deadline for submission is May 31, 2005. We look forward to seeing
>you in October.
>
>
>
>  * * *
>
>
>
>Themed sessions (please submit directly to session organizers
>preferably via email):
>
>
>
>Screening Masculinities in Third, Diasporic and Transnational Cinemas:
>Intersections and Interrelations
>
>
>
>Session Organizer: Melisa Brittain
>(brittain /at/ ualberta.ca)
>Dept. of English and Film Studies
>
>3-5 Humanities Centre
>
>University of Alberta
>
>Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2E5
>
>
>
>To date, masculinity studies has largely focused on white
>masculinities. And while work on post-colonial masculinities began in
>the 1990s, there is still precious little scholarship on how
>masculinities are produced at the intersections of a range of identity
>categories and discursive regimes, such as nation, race, imperialism,
>globalization, sexuality, class, nation, ethnicity and religion, to
>name only the most obvious.
>
>In light of the rising interest in both transnational media studies and
>masculinity studies, and in an effort to remedy the paucity of work on
>the interrelations among racialized communities, and the intersections
>through which masculine identities and subjectivities are produced and
>articulated, this panel seeks papers that investigate representations
>of masculinity in cinema that can be categorized as third, diasporic or
>transnational. Essays that investigate the production of masculinities
>at the intersections of nation, race, imperialism, globalization,
>sexuality, class, nation, ethnicity and/or religion in these cinemas
>are particularly welcome, as are papers that engage with an
>interdisciplinary and politically engaged approach to 'reading'
>both film and masculinity.
>
>___________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>Transnational Cultural Studies in Canada
>
>Session Organizer: Jenny Burman
>(jenny.burman /at/ mcgill.ca)
>
>Assistant Professor in Communication Studies
>
>Dept. of Art History and Communication Studies
>
>McGill University
>
>W-280, 853 Sherbrooke St. W.,
>
>Montreal QC, H3A 2T6
>
>
>
>This session invites presentations from scholars working in the area of
>transnational cultural studies, which might be described as an area
>that merges the theoretical advances of humanities-based postcolonial
>studies with a reinvigorated socioeconomic analysis of the predicaments
>of globalized spaces. Research topics might include (but are definitely
>not restricted to):
>
>
>
>- Locale-specific studies and/or theories of diasporization,
>hybridization, creolization
>
>- Oppositional movements that organize around questions of citizenship,
>belonging and illegality
>
>- Critical readings of the 2002 Immigration and Refugee Protection Act
>(sic), the 2001 Census questionnaire or other government documents
>
>- Diasporized urban cultural production
>
>___________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>The Question of the Animal: Why Now?
>
>
>Session Organizer: Dr. Jodey Castricano
>
>(jcastric /at/ wlu.ca)
>
>Associate Professor/Cultural Studies Series Editor
>
>Department of English & Film Studies
>
>Wilfrid Laurier University
>
>Waterloo, ON, N2L 3C5
>
>
>
>In an interview in Topia, Carey Wolfe-author of Animal Rites: American
>Culture, the Discourse of Species, and Posthumanist Theory-argues that
>"cultural studies and critical theory have really, really lagged behind
>. developments in the broader society" in dealing with what Carey
>refers to as "the question of the animal" (40). Carey maintains that
>forms of "speciesism" must be given the same critical attention that
>has been recruited against sexism and racism in critical race studies,
>feminism, and queer theory. This panel-entitled "The Question of the
>Animal: Why Now?" seeks interdisciplinary papers that critique the
>division between human and beast and address the human-animal
>relationship in the context of posthumanism.
>
>___________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>(Image)ining Resistance
>
>
>Session Organizers: Keri Cronin Kirsty Robertson
>(keri.cronin /at/ ualberta.ca) (kirsty /at/ mailodic.com)
>
>Department of Art & Design Queen's University
>
>3-98 Fine Arts Building 1432 Montcalm St.
>
>University of Alberta Queen's University
>Edmonton, AB, T6G 2C9 Montreal QC, H2I 3G8
>
>
>
>The goal of this session is to provide a forum for interdisciplinary
>approaches and critical examinations that address the use of visual
>imagery in social and activist movements throughout history. From
>banners embroidered for suffragette actions, to the impact of
>photographs taken in Soweto in 1976, to political puppets created for
>recent global justice demonstrations, the intersections between visual
>culture and activism relate a rich history with transnational and
>transideological import.
>
>
>
>This session stems from a publication entitled (Image)ining Resistance
>that we are currently in the process of editing. We see (Image)ining
>Resistance as a project that breaks the narrow boundaries of the
>printed word, operating on a number of levels, and spreading beyond the
>page through a series of conference panels, discussions and dialogues
>surrounding the issues raised by the authors. We would like to
>encourage this open process by inviting the authors as well as other
>scholars, activists and artists whose interests intersect with and
>contribute to the theoretical underpinnings of (Image)ining Resistance
>to continue these discussions. As such, we would be looking for people
>whose work interrogates the links between visual culture and activism,
>through interdisciplinary approaches, from a wide range of historical
>periods, geographic regions and protest actions.
>
>____________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>Comics: Mainstream or Fringe?
>
>
>
>Session Organizer: Orion Ussner Kidder
>
>(okidder /at/ ualberta.ca)
>
>Dept. of English and Film Studies
>
>3-5 Humanities Centre
>
>University of Alberta
>
>Edmonton, Alberta, T6G 2E5
>
>
>Comics were, undoubtedly, a mainstream medium in America, Canada, and
>Britain for most of the twentieth century. However, the readership at
>the beginning of the twenty-first is both smaller and older than it
>used to be. Comics, even superhero comics, find themselves telling
>stories to a shrinking audience that wants more sophisticated material,
>whether it is in the form of superheroes or not.
>
>This panel will explore the interplay between the narrow generic
>expectations of comics, on the one hand (I.e., superheroes or related,
>high-fantasy genres), and the growing demand for mature and politically
>charged content, on the other (eg, Art Spiegelman's _Maus_, or Marjane
>Satrapi's _Persepolis_). Papers can be on the subject of traditional
>superhero comics (usually Anglo-American), or underground comics.
>Studies on comics from outside the Anglo-American tradition (Japanese
>'manga,' European, etc.) are strongly encouraged, as well.
>
>____________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>Cultural Studies and Education
>
>
>Session Organizer: Jennifer Kelly
>
>(jennifer.kelly /at/ ualberta.ca)
>
>Department of Education Policy Studies
>
>7-104 Education North
>
>University of Alberta
>
>Edmonton, AB, T6G 2G5
>
>
>
>Although the links between cultural studies and education are not
>evident within recent formulations of cultural studies a significant
>portion of the early ethnographic research undertaken at the CCCS
>involved the analysis of school and youth (Willis, Hebdige). Similarly,
>others (Steele) have traced the contested "routes" of cultural studies
>via post WWI adult education and the work of Thompson, Williams and
>Hoggart. The purpose of the panel is to explore the present day
>articulation of education as an area of study and cultural studies as a
>framework of analysis. How might theorization within the field of
>education draw on cultural studies to develop a more complex
>understanding of issues relating directly and indirectly to the field
>of education. How have education scholars dealt with the conceptual
>challenges that a cultural studies framework poses for the field of
>education? What forms of analysis and perspectives can Cultural Studies
>contribute to broader debates in the field (race, class, gender
>sexualtities). How might understandings of, youth identities,
>racialization and pedagogy be enhanced through a cultural studies
>prism?
>
>
>
>____________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>People Lie. Numbers Don't: Business Discourses and Public Culture
>
>
>Session Organizer: Dr. Josephine Mills
>
>(josephine.mills /at/ uleth.ca)
>
>University of Lethbridge
>
>4401 University Drive
>
>Lethbridge, AB, T1K 3M4
>
>
>
>Business discourses have become the norm for cultural institutions and
>arts professionals. Whether it is using attendance figures and other
>numbers as a supposedly objective measure of success or developing
>business plans to meet the requirements of public granting agencies,
>cultural professionals now regularly deploy business discourses as part
>of operating public institutions and accept this as an inevitable fact
>in our landscape. This panel will investigate the language and
>assumptions involved with this trend and propose strategies to either
>outright counter or negotiate within these discourses.
>
>____________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>Representing Nature/Imagining the Wild
>
>
>Session Organizers: Michael D. Pereira Lorelei L. Hanson
>
>                                   (mp04cp /at/ Brocku.ca)
>(lorelei.hanson /at/ athabascau.ca)
>
>                                   2 Brigger St. #310 Athabasca
>University
>
>                                   St. Catharines, ON Edmonton Learning
>Centre
>
>                                   L2R 7J1 3rd Floor, N Tower, 7 Street
>Tower
>
>
>               10030-107 Street
>
> 
>Edmonton,
>AB, T5J 3E4
>
>
>
>Representations of nature and the wild are frequently case as signs of
>authenticity with "wild nature" situated as the locus for epic
>struggles that cast into the shadows other social, political and moral
>concerns. This session will bring together a panel of scholars who can
>ask a new set of questions about the relationship between humans and
>the natural environment. The panelists will seek to unpack and
>deconstruct the ways in which Canadian culture represents nature and/or
>the wild, and our relationship with these, in order to better
>understand how these representations relate to increasing ecological,
>economic and social problems and to explore the consequences for the
>environment of various contemporary cultural myths about nature.
>
>____________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>Ritual Virtualities, Performative Materialities
>
>
>Session Organizer: Rob Shields
>
>(rshields /at/ ualberta.ca)
>
>5-21 Tory Bldg
>
>University of Alberta
>
>Edmonton AB, T6G 2H4
>
>
>
>This session considers the contribution that an understanding of the
>virtual can bring to an analysis of cultural intangibles. After Proust,
>the virtual is 'ideal but not abstract, real but not actual'. To what
>extent can the cultural be understood as a dialectic of the material
>and virtual, mediated by ritual forms and performativity? What are the
>losses and risks in this move to a set of theorists including Deleuze,
>Merleau-Ponty, Butler and Whitehead? What are the ethical and aesthetic
>gains and how might this contribute to a fleshy politics of recognition
>and respect? Papers combining both theory and a strong sense of
>embodiment(s) within the everyday are welcomed.
>
>____________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>Visual Studies and the Ethical Imagination
>
>
>
>Session Organizer: Sharon Sliwinski
>
>(Sharon /at/ yorku.ca)
>
>29 High Park Blvd.
>Toronto, Ontario, M6R 1M6
>
>
>The influence of various theoretical models-psychoanalysis, semiotics,
>structural poststructural, and postcolonial thought-has recently led to
>a dismantling of traditional art history in favour of the broad and
>eclectic field of visual studies. This panel seeks papers that will
>interrogate how this reorientation intersects with ethical concerns.
>Although it was once commonplace to assume that a single photograph may
>have done more to halt the Vietnam War than all the writings of moral
>philosophers of the time, there is also a growing archive of
>terrorist-made images (from the Abu Ghraib prison photographs to
>home-made decapitation videos). What does this ambivalence signal for
>visual studies? How do visual representations organize ethical
>response, both in terms of possibilities and limits? What is the
>relationship between the faculty for telling right and wrong and the
>faculty of aesthetic judgment?
>
>Topics could include:
>. New technologies and the global circulation of images
>. Documentary and responsibility
>. The faculty of judgment
>. Bearing witness and collective/social memory
>. Colonial and ethnological "views"
>. News and humanitarian intervention
>. Apathy and compassion fatigue
>. Contemporary and historical art practices
>. Disciplinary intersections/boundaries
>
>____________________________________________________________________________
>
>
>
>Unfinished Business
>
>
>Session Organizer: Vivian Zenari
>
>(vzenari /at/ ualberta.ca)
>
>PhD Candidate
>Department of English and Film Studies
>3-5 Humanities Centre
>University of Alberta
>Edmonton, AB TG6 2E5
>
>
>
>The subject of this panel is unfinished works: unfinished novels,
>symphonies, poems, buildings, films, and so on. The papers on this
>panel should address in some way the work's "unfinishedness." For
>example: What factors distinguish an unfinished project from a finished
>project? What roles do authorial intention and audience response play
>in determining if a
>project is incomplete? Should we theorize unfinished projects
>differently from finished ones? What does it mean when one creator
>completes a project begun by another (such as Stephen Spielberg
>completing Stanley Kubrick's plan for _AI_)? What are the implications
>of recuperating an unfinished project for another purpose (think of
>Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe salvaging their "making-of" documentary for
>Terry Gilliam's abandoned _The Man Who
>Killed Don Quixote_ and turning it into the "not-making-of"
>documentary_Lost in La Mancha_)?
>
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>_______________________________________________
>G-csacont mailing list
>(G-csacont /at/ McMaster.CA)
>http://mailman.McMaster.CA/mailman/listinfo/g-csacont

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Carpentier Nico (Phd)
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Katholieke Universiteit Brussel - Catholic University of Brussels
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T: ++ 32 (0)2-412.42.78
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Office: 4/0/18
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Media Sociology (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.30
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.28.61
Office: 5B.401a
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European Consortium for Communication Research
Web: http://www.eccr.info
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E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ kubrussel.ac.be)
Web: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
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