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[Commlist] CfP: Revisiting the Margins Conference
Tue Feb 18 15:29:26 GMT 2020
*Call for papers:*
Revisiting the Margins: Contemporary Perspectives in North American Studies
Annual conference of the Graduate School of North American Studies
Freie Universität Berlin
10-12 June 2020
Keynote speakers:
Jacob Breslow (London School of Economics)
Nikita Dhawan (Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen)
Tiffany Lethabo King (Georgia State University)
Ellen McCallum (Michigan State University)
**
Claims about marginality are increasingly being made in order to explain
and justify a wide variety of actions in North American culture and
politics, economics and the arts. As a result, the concepts of the
margins and marginalization seem to have renewed urgency. The
center-margins binary is far from new, having been crucial to
poststructuralist, postcolonialist, and intersectional criticisms of the
1980s and 90s. Since then, however, numerous
theoretical interventions have attempted to redirect critical discourse
away from this dichotomy. It is in this light that the 13th annual
Graduate Conference of North American Studies at the Freie Universität
Berlin seeks to investigate the current relevance and contemporary
debates surrounding the margins and marginality across numerous fields
of research. Marginality is perhaps best understood here as a
transdisciplinary concept whose actual meaning is contingent upon
context: Aesthetic marginality and the avant-garde are commonly seen as
productive to creativity, whereas in social contexts, marginality is
often detrimental and caused by discriminatory practices. Social justice
movements like #MeToo or #BlackLivesMatter make claims for marginality
and mutuality, but so do actors of the political (far-)right, who argue
that it is they who are being victimized by mainstream media and a
culture of political correctness. These claims can of course be
contested, but that makes other questions all the more pertinent: Is
there a strategic value in pronouncing oneself marginal or marginalized?
What does it mean to feel marginalized? What kind of agency is possible
in the margins, however conceptualized?
The Graduate School invites abstracts for individual 20-minute
presentations from researchers of all disciplines of American Studies
including cultural studies, media and communication studies, economics,
history, literature, political science, sociology, and related fields of
research. Submissions from early-career researchers and from researchers
of diverse backgrounds are especially encouraged. Topics for papers may
include but are not limited to:
▪ Debates surrounding theories of marginality in the contemporary moment
▪ Academic and educational margins: marginalized knowledges,
disciplines, and practices; marginalization within the educational system
▪ Climate crisis and its marginalizing effects
▪ Geographies of marginalization in urban, suburban, and rural spaces
▪ Margins of democracy: ideology, disenfranchisement, and electoral reform
▪ Histories of marginalization and history as marginalization
▪ Pluralist approaches to mainstream economics
▪ Writing in the margins: marginal authors, literatures, and genres;
making use of page margins, flip sides, and paratexts in art and literature
▪ Avant-garde aesthetics: the fringes of mainstream film, literature,
and media
▪ Decentering epistemologies: black feminism and queer theory
▪ The productive and destructive potential of the margins as subversive
spaces; extremism and marginality
Abstracts of 300 words should be submitted to
(conference2020 /at/ gsnas.fu-berlin.de)
<mailto:(conference2020 /at/ gsnas.fu-berlin.de)>, together with the author’s
name, institutional affiliation (if applicable), and a short biography
of no more than 100 words. The deadline for submission of abstracts is
*1 March 2020*.
__For further information visit www.gsnas2020.com
<http://www.gsnas2020.com/>. If you have any questions please don’t
hesitate to contact us.
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