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[ecrea] CFP: ASA 2015: The (Re)production of Misery and the Ways of Resistance
Thu Jan 08 09:58:32 GMT 2015
CFP: ASA 2015: The (Re)production of Misery and the Ways of Resistance
Proposals are invited for a session on “Representing Misery without
Civil Society” to be held at the American Studies Association conference
in Toronto, October 8-11 2015.
Scholars, such as Partha Chatterjee and Frank Wilderson, have recently
shown the profound analytical limitations of civil society as the
political terrain of social struggle. Whether from the standpoint of
colonial and/or black positionality, these scholars have demonstrated
that civil society has not only historically encompassed few people but
it has also relied upon the exclusion of various subject positions to
establish its normative order. As such, the deployment of civil society
and its derivative concepts to describe and comprehend social struggle
elide both this fraught history and potentially misconstrue the
political aims of radical ways of resistance. Yet, as thorough-going as
this critique may be, our contention is that its impact has not been
fully realized at the level of scholarly practice by literary and
cultural studies scholars. Indeed, though we may theoretically
acknowledge and examine the conceptual limitations of civil society, it,
more often than not, continues to shape, implicitly or explicitly, how
we define and historicize political crisis and interpret cultural
practices of resistance. Especially when it comes to questions of the
work of representation, how can we resist the assumption that the
cultures we study are operating within or upon the conceptual geography
of “civil society”?
In this panel, we invite participants to investigate how the concept of
civil society has been mobilized in critiques of the politics of
representation of misery and suffering. What role has it played in the
making of our scholarly conceptions of the work of representation – both
its means and ends? How has it framed what counts as a legitimate means
of “resistance” (and what doesn’t) in representational contexts? In
asking these questions, we hope to both identify the particular critical
practices which harbor these assumptions and begin imagining
alternatives which would portray the politics of representing misery in
a different light.
Please submit paper abstracts (250 words) and brief C.V. to Christian
Ravela ((cravela /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(cravela /at/ gmail.com)>) and Curtis
Hisayasu ((curtishisayasu /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(curtishisayasu /at/ gmail.com)>) by
January 23, 2015
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