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[ecrea] CFP Politics of Representation: Human Rights, Witnessing... (11/1/06; ACLA, 4/19/07-4/22/07)
Mon Oct 09 20:28:57 GMT 2006
>American Comparative Literature Association Annual Meeting
>April 19-22, 2007 in Puebla, Mexico
>Deadline for proposals: Nov. 1 (via the ACLA website at
><http://acla2007.complit.ucla.edu/>http://acla2007.complit.ucla.edu/)
>
>The Politics of Representation: Human Rights Violations, Witnessing,
>and Transnational Readership
>
> In the discussion of human rights violations, the
> emphasis on violence and repression often portrays the violated as
> victims needing to be rescued by the "west" or by the rich "north."
> Scholars and members of violated communities have challenged this
> representation to show how "victims" can be the site of both
> oppression and resistance. The drive is toward how texts, with
> their transnational readership, became sites of revitalization of
> the image of different victim groups as agents of their own
> history. Targets of human rights violations have turned against the
> elite politics of representation of human rights abuse which have
> depicted the violated as mere "victims." In a classic example, the
> lower caste woman turned bandit turned Parliamentarian "Phoolan
> Devi" attempted to block the release of a film about her life
> produced by Channel 4 in the UK.
> In light of the vehement criticism of the cultural
> politics of the elite-subaltern relationship, this panel seeks to
> examine the politics of representation. Instead of confining
> ourselves only to the text, the panel will also examine how such
> representational politics inflects the political in the material
> world of human rights activism. Thus papers might also consider the
> influence of these texts on legal and public opinion, as seen in
> the courts, political discourse, and media. In other words, we
> would like to situate texts and textual traditions in the material
> politics of human rights and explore how textual representations of
> violence enable the disenfranchised to exert "pressure on sign
> systems that uphold existing political and moral hierarchies," as
> Bishnupriya Ghosh says. Well-known examples include such texts as
> I, Rigoberta Menchu and India's Bandit Queen whose circulation
> marked and influenced the real world of activism, but the panel is
> open to discussions of texts from any cultural or linguistic context.
>and
>
>Although we are looking forward to examining new interventions in
>this topic, the following questions might also suggest possible
>routes of exploration:
>
> * How do we responsibly archive violence in postcolonial
> contexts so that we do not strengthen the imperial claim that
> certain juvenile nations need to be parented by others?
>
> * How do we avoid commodifying violence for a global market
> thriving on profit from texts on postcolonial violence that enhance
> the self-righteous claims of the discipline of the "north"?
> Instead, how are we to mobilize sensitivity and accountability in a
> transnational readership that rallies against such violence? How
> can that readership co-operate in acts of resistance with the
> disenfranchised, thus avoiding a patronizing ideology of protection?
>
> * Is there an ethical imperative for writers and scholars
> depicting and studying violence in postcolonial contexts to trace
> how postcolonial violence is generated out of cumulative structures
> of oppression that place the pre-colonial, colonial, and
> postcolonial in a continuum as agents of violence?
>
> * Can the representation of violence in Northern Ireland,
> indigenous Australia, and the 9/11 and post-9/11 United States take
> us further than the literal and geopolitical connotation of
> "post-colonial" to re-signify the term itself?
>
> * How does integrating the "small" voices of women in the
> project of historical violence galvanize a politics of human rights
> representation that makes audible the "smaller" voices of children,
> the aged, and the disabled during geopolitical upheavals?
>
> * Can historic injustice against certain communities be
> addressed within the boundaries of the post-conflict nation-state,
> or is the only forum for reconciling the rights of violated groups
> with those of the state the transnational venue of human rights politics?
>
>This panel will meet on two or three consecutive days (depending on
>the number of papers), and presenters are strongly encouraged to
>plan to attend all sessions of the panel. This is a unique
>conference format that allows a small group of researchers to pursue
>a particular topic in depth within the context of a larger conference.
>
>For questions about the panel, please contact the seminar organizers:
>Annedith Schneider
>(<mailto:(schneider /at/ sabanciuniv.edu)>(schneider /at/ sabanciuniv.edu))
>Basuli Deb (<mailto:(debbasul /at/ msu.edu)>(debbasul /at/ msu.edu))
>
>For more information on the conference and to submit paper
>proposals, please visit the official conference website at
><http://acla2007.complit.ucla.edu/>http://acla2007.complit.ucla.edu/.
>
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Carpentier Nico (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.24.14
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.28.61
Office: 5B.401a
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Katholieke Universiteit Brussel - Catholic University of Brussels
Vrijheidslaan 17 - B-1081 Brussel - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-412.42.78
F: ++ 32 (0)2/412.42.00
Office: 4/0/18
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European Communication Research and Education Association
Web: http://www.ecrea.eu
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E-mail: (Nico.Carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
Web: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
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