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[ecrea] Call for Papers - Death in the Cityscape
Fri Sep 12 08:51:34 GMT 2014
Call for Papers
Canadian Review of American Studies
Death in the Cityscape
In contemporary literature, the intersection of the space of death and
mourning within the confines of the city acts as a method of critiquing
our understood modes of living. Since Plato’s Republic, the uneasy
interplay of death and memorialization within the polis has been
considered. Theorists like Gillian Rose in Mourning Becomes the Law and
Sharon Zukin in Naked City have elaborated upon the discourse of space,
death, and mourning within an urban setting. This issue of finding a
space within the city for the dead remains with us, and recent American
economic turmoil places the urban metropolis and its spaces of decay in
sharp focus (seen in novels like Teju Cole's Open City, television shows
like The Wire and movies such as Synecdoche, New York). Where in the
city is death (dis)allowed? Under what authority does the city, as a
social nexus point, memorialize the dead? How does art work in concert
with, or against, accepted practices of mourning and memorializing
within the city limits? Can one mourn the passing of a city and, if so,
how is this enacted? While this abstract focuses primarily on
contemporary American work, we welcome papers related to any period of
American urban history.
We invite scholarly articles on this topic in any genre of American
studies. Submissions should be no more than 8000 words in length.
Abstracts of no more than 250 words will be accepted until December 1,
2014. Completed articles must be submitted by April 1, 2015.
Send abstracts and submissions to (dcalabre /at/ uwo.ca)
Possible topics may include:
- Death's relationship to identity in the American city
- American Cities Characterized
- Post-9/11 American Cities and Identity
- Death and Mourning in the City
- Death and Public Art
- Memorials and Public Mourning
- Urban American: Recession and After
Keywords:
- African-American
- Children's Literature
- Cultural Studies and Historical Approaches
- Ecocriticism and Environmental Studies
- Ethnicity and National Identity
- Film and Television
- Gender Studies and Sexuality
- Interdisciplinary
- Literary Modernism
- Popular Culture
- Postcolonialism
- Postmodernism and Postmodern culture
- Theatre Studies
- Twenty-First Century Literature
- Visual Art and Culture
_________________________________________________
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Submission guidelines - http://bit.ly/crassubmissions
Canadian Review of American Studies
Department of English, Carleton University
1125 Colonel By Drive
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1S 5B6
E-mail: (cras /at/ carleton.ca)
Fax: (613) 234-4418
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