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[ecrea] CFP for 'The View from Above'
Sat May 17 05:00:10 GMT 2014
The View from Above: Cosmopolitan Culture and its Critics
An interdisciplinary conference for post-graduate students and early
career researchers
Monday 22 and Tuesday 23 September 2014
University of Melbourne
Keynote speakers:
Professor John M. Ganim, University of California, Riverside, on
medieval cosmopolitanism
Dr. Brigid Rooney, University of Sydney, on cosmopolitan suburbia
‘Cosmopolitanism’ connotes a dynamic, eclectic and sophisticated
cultural sphere, one that transcends borders and national differences.
Although the term is an ancient one, deriving from the Greek word
kosmopolitês, its meaning has never been stable. The notion of the
cosmopolitan is glamorous and in some respects elitist, suggesting a
‘luxuriously free-floating view from above’ (Bruce Robbins,
Cosmopolitics, 1998). At the same time, it has utopian connotations of
pluralism and universality.
In the last decade or so, discourses of cosmopolitanism have experienced
a resurgence. The term is increasingly associated with
multiculturalism, diasporic culture and the impact of globalisation.
Critics have advocated new forms of ‘rooted’, ‘vernacular’, postcolonial
and even ‘refugee’ cosmopolitanism, in an attempt to break away from
Eurocentric canons and outmoded nation-based identity politics. But do
these new accounts of cosmopolitanism resolve the tension between its
egalitarian and elitist impulses? Are aspirations to cosmopolitanism
still, as Simon Gikandi suggests, ‘an essential mark of bourgeois
identity and privilege’?
This conference invites participants to explore cosmopolitanism, both as
a utopian project and as an object of critique. While the focus of the
conference is on literature and literary criticism, we welcome papers
addressing theatre, the visual arts, popular culture, translation and
other forms of cultural expression in either contemporary or historical
settings. We also strongly encourage contributions from creative
writers. Presenters may choose to focus on Australian cosmopolitanisms
or address broader categories such as the postcolonial or the
transnational.
Topics for discussion might include:
· old and new cosmopolitanisms (including the influence of
classical, medieval and early modern texts on more recent understandings
of the cosmopolitan)
· cosmopolitan sensibilities in colonial, postcolonial and
diasporic literatures
· cosmopolitanism and class
· cosmopolitanism and the metropolitan/regional
· feminist engagements with cosmopolitanism
· cosmopolitanism and sexuality
· cosmopolitanism, advertising, popular culture and everyday life
· transnationalism and globalisation, parochialism and provinciality
· cosmopolitan readerships and polities; the role of translation
· creative practice and the cosmopolitan
· the text as a cosmopolitan space
· utopianism and cosmopolitan futures
The convenors welcome abstracts from postgraduate and early career
researchers working in any field of the humanities, particularly
literary studies, creative writing, theatre studies, history (including
art history), cultural studies and translation studies. Please forward
an abstract of no more than 250 words to
(viewfromaboveconference /at/ gmail.com) by Sunday 20 July 2014.
Co-convenors:
Dr Katie Hansord
Dr Catherine Noske
Lucinda O’Brien
Dr Jay Daniel Thompson
Supported by the Association for the Study of Australian Literature, the
University of Melbourne Faculty of Arts and School of Culture and
Communication, and Deakin University.
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