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[Commlist] CFP: What's happening to cultural studies?
Wed Mar 23 17:56:51 GMT 2022
Call for Contributions
*What’s happening to cultural studies?***
*Centre for Memory, Narrative and Histories (CMNH) -*University of Brighton
14-16^th September, 2022
This conference intends to promote a conversation about cultural
studies: its current shape, the forces that have shaped it, and its
possible futures. It will be a hybrid conference, with in-person and
remote participation.
Rather than assuming a singular proper form of cultural studies
operating globally, the conference will try to balance the task of
recognizing the multiplicities of cultural studies with that of
understanding the changing and increasingly contradictory place of
cultural studies in the academic world. One might think of this as an
effort to begin a cultural studies analysis of cultural studies itself
in the present conjuncture.
This does not mean that we want to treat cultural studies as an isolated
and purely academic object. Rather, we wish to find ways of recognising
and reckoning with the constitution and role of the university in
cultural studies work today, in teaching, in employment practices, in
research and in (scholarly) publishing.
Consequently, we are keen to provide a space for people to step back
from the specificities of their own research to take a broader look at
intellectual work in cultural studies, and at what is happening to it.
We want to generate a conversation about cultural studies /per se/.We
welcome contributions from those who want to present their own work in
ways which serve to open up the larger questions of the state of
cultural studies. We want to explore the contextuality of cultural
studies as a multifarious discipline, its variations and affordances. We
are interested in critically exploring the conditions of its various
possibilities, impossibilities, and transformations with an eye to
figuring out what works, what does not and why.
As a whole, the conference aims at building critical perspectives to
understand the institutional and political conditions of cultural
studies today. It will explore the cultural studies project in its
practical and theoretical heterogeneity. Finally, it will work to
imagine the possibility of a creative and productive future for the project.
In order to promote conversation and collective thinking, we will not
follow a traditional conference format. We have instead designed a
structure governed by three themes, each of which will be addressed on
one of the conference’s three days. Each of these days will begin with
an opening panel which identifies fundamental questions and
struggles.These will be followed by further contributions devoted to the
theme broached in that panel. To avoid ending up with a de facto
separation within the larger conversation of the whole, we will avoid
parallel panels.
Amongst those who have already agreed to participate are Lawrence
Grossberg, Shakuntala Banaji and Jeremy Gilbert. We are particularly
keen to hear also from those at the start of or at an early stage in
their scholarly work on cultural studies.
The three overarching themes, and the three corresponding days of the
conference, are as follows:
*Day 1: What is cultural studies? ***
·Is there a shared project of cultural studies – e.g., conjunctural
analysis – manifested in its many different formations?
·If so, is this project still providing some defining and unifying sense
of what differentiates cultural studies from other
intellectual/political projects?
·Is there a differential geography to these discussions, changes and
challenges?
·What are the challenges of new theoretical resources for cultural studies?
·Where is cultural studies flourishing and what are the conditions of
possibility?
***Day 2. What are the institutional conditions of the current state of
cultural studies? ***
·The changing economies, structures and priorities of the academy in the
contemporary cultural and political landscape – with a particular focus on:
oDisciplinarity and interdisciplinarity
oEmployment opportunities (who gets employed/where do they get employed)
oWhat gets published as cultural studies
oWhat gets taught as cultural studies.
* Day 3: Does cultural studies still matter? What is it good for today?***
·What might the future of cultural studies look like? What can be done?
·How are the groups – and respective cultures – that practice cultural
studies constructed, composed, maintained, challenged, changed, and even
replaced? Who are their real actors and which powers do they impose and
consent to?
·Has cultural studies lost its way or is it flourishing by transforming
itself in response to the specificity of the contemporary conjunctures,
and the increasing demand for academic specialisation?
If you would like to be involved, please contact
(culturalstudies /at/ brighton.ac.uk)
<mailto:(culturalstudies /at/ brighton.ac.uk)>*by _May the 31st 2022_, *with an
indication of which ‘theme’ you would like to participate in, and an
abstract (of up to 300 words) for how you will do so. We welcome various
forms and media of contributions.
When sending your abstract, please express a preference for either
in-person or remote participation. Please also append a short bio to
your abstract.
Following the conference, participants will be invited to contribute to
edited publications exploring arguments about the state of cultural
studies today and its possible futures.
The conference organizing committee:
Cristina Moreno Almeida (King’s), Maria Manuel Baptista (Aveiro), Tom
Bunyard (Brighton), Lawrence Grossberg (UNC), Suzanne Leonard (Simmons),
Toby Lovat (Brighton), Patricia McManus (Brighton), Marco Solaroli
(Bologna), Anna Zsubori (Loughborough)
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