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[ecrea] CFP The Child’s Voice, the Child’s Gaze - Université Bordeaux Montaigne
Tue Jul 08 09:49:55 GMT 2014
The Child's Voice, the Child's Gaze
27-28 March 2015
Université Bordeaux Montaigne
Organizers : Stéphanie Benson, Sarah Dufaure, Stéphanie Durrans and
Lhorine François
As part of the project entitled "Powers in Minor Mode", the research
group CLIMAS is holding a two-day symposium on the place and the status
of children in literature, cinema and the visual arts. The notion of
minor is not here to be seen as a derogatory term indicating the lower
rank in a binary hierarchical structure, but as a dynamic space of
empowerment bringing new vitality to the notion of major. Although the
very concept of major usually centres around the overbearing nature of
an established model demanding conformity, or the enduring presence of a
prescriptive power structure dictating norms and rules, we shall explore
the ways in which the notion of minor may also contribute to the
deconstruction of the prevailing system, to its collapse due to internal
contradictions. In this respect the minor can be seen as a potentially
permanent dynamic process that does not seek to access the field of the
major and establish any kind of comfortable status therein, but on the
contrary explores the active power concealed in margins, asides, retreats.
The Latin origins of the term (infantem / infans) indicate the inability
to speak, give a name to those who are silenced, who have no say. The
voice of the child has, however, taken over a whole field of literature
bringing some critics to belittle the phenomenon as a passing fad.
Actually, the phenomenon is much deeper than the commercial trend to
which it is commonly associated, and often an ideological and aesthetic
project is at work, projects that this symposium proposes to look into.
Whether through Walt Whitman, who resorts to a child's voice at the
beginning of Leaves of Grass in order to lay the groundwork for his
philosophical and poetic reflexion, or Emerson who develops in his
essays "Nature" and "The Poet" the idea that children are natural poets
and that poets should seek the child dormant inside them, this
perspective potentially undermines the major modes of perception that
have frozen into rigidity and inflexibility through constantly needing
to label, pigeon-hole and discriminate the world around them. On the
contrary, the child creates his or her own rules, transcends prohibition
and gazes on the world with a creative and refreshing innocence near to
original creativity that has not been tainted by the disillusions of
experience. The child, gifted with the almost god-like ability to create
his own alternative world, becomes a source for propositions and
revolutions in the poetic world. More recently, many writers have also
used the voice and gaze of a child in order to express fear, anguish and
pain in the face of death, for instance. For psychoanalysts, recovering
one's infant ego may also prove necessary during therapy in order to
understand and overcome fear and suffering or to counteract a
pathological fear of death.
But how can the writer represent the world of childhood once it has been
left behind, once experience has erased the innocence of the child's
gaze? Is this gaze not always already mediated through that of the
adult? A number of writers, aware of the challenge offered by the simple
choice of a child as "center of consciousness," have tackled this
aesthetic question (Henry James in What Maisie Knew). The world seen
through a child's eyes is simplistic in a way that could appear
incompatible with the conception of literature as a noble art. This
symposium also addresses the tension between these high and low modes of
writing: the ways in which the minor mode of children's stories informs
the major art of writing. Papers should also examine the stylistic
strategies employed by writers to represent the word and world of the
child. Are specific figures of speech or literary devices more likely to
convey the child's gaze (parataxis vs. hypotaxis, metaphor vs. metonymy,
asyndeton vs. polysyndeton, etc.)? Are some writing strategies more
appropriate for giving voice to a child's perception of the world
(repetition indicating limited vocabulary revolving in circles, figures
of transfer or displacement such as hypallage deriving from the child's
encompassing approach to his or her environment)?
The symposium will also try to analyze the pitfalls of the minor mode.
The notion of minor may sometimes appear as a convenient opportunity, an
aesthetic or political niche in which to position oneself deliberately
as a strategy to gain access to dominant modes of power and
representation. By smoothing the child as a category to be opposed to
the adult, the risk is that of simplifying a child's subversive powers
and alternative gaze on life, of stifling the creativity and diversity
of his vision. How can we avoid framing the child in the homogenous
category of the minor?
15-20 line paper abstracts are to be sent to Stéphanie Durrans
((stephanie.durrans /at/ u-bordeaux-montaigne.fr)) by September, 30 2014. A
selection of peer-reviewed articles will be published in 2017 along with
other papers from an additional symposium to be held in 2016 on the
relationship between children's literature and "noble" literature.
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