Archive for calls, February 2016

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[ecrea] Call For Papers - Special Issue: "Imperial Afterlives: The US, Vietnam, and the Global Imagination"

Fri Feb 12 17:55:28 GMT 2016





Volume 38, Number 3 /2008 of Canadian Review of American Studies is now
available on the utpjournals

*CALL FOR PAPERS*

*/Canadian Review of American Studies/*

*Special Issue: “Imperial Afterlives: The US, Vietnam, and the Global
Imagination”*

Guest Editors: Timothy K. August, Vinh Nguyen, Evyn Lê Espiritu

This special issue investigates the many ways Vietnam and its diaspora
continue to be shaped through affective and political engagements with
the US and other global actors. Taking seriously American Studies’
commitment to the transnational turn, this issue will explore how US
military action and empire has served to position Vietnam and Vietnamese
people on the world stage. We seek to understand the Vietnam War and its
aftermath as global events in which bodies, memories, and epistemologies
circulate and endure through various means and in varying sites.

Scholars such as Mimi Thi Nguyen, Isabelle Thuy Pelaud, and Yen Lê
Espiritu have shown that narratives about Vietnamese refugees are vital
in (re)producing the rescue/liberation narratives that justify the
United States’ economic, political, and military interventions. We would
like to build on this insight by examining the different and multiple
ways that Vietnam, (diasporic) Vietnamese bodies, and histories of the
Vietnam War /signify /around the globe. In other words, what reading and
narrative practices, racial logic, and/or social structures does Vietnam
and Vietnamese people invoke?

As both Vietnamese people and Vietnam are continually discussed in a
remarkably /comparative /manner, we ask through what means Vietnamese
history, culture, and bodies become integrated, differentiated, or used
in transnational dialogue. As, traditionally, the US and their allies
have played a dominant role in defining the reception and value of
Vietnamese bodies, in this special issue we turn to cultural and social
texts to examine how a series of counter-memories, negative affects, and
commercial desires work together to imagine possible futures for
Vietnam, Vietnamese Americans, and other refugees.

We are interested in broad understandings of the Vietnam War and its
legacies and thus encourage varied approaches to the theme of this
issue. We welcome papers that explore:

  * The mediated reception of Vietnamese bodies and culture through
    American systems of interpretation
  * The role Vietnamese history plays in the creation of contemporary
    global politics and cultural narratives
  * The project of creating more localized as well as globalized
    Vietnamese and Vietnamese American histories
  * Diasporic Vietnamese communities both in and outside the US, and how
    they relate to one another
  * New relationships and utopian impulses generated by an engagement
    with Vietnamese experiences
  * The historical positionality of Vietnam as a site through which to
    imagine anticolonial and/or third world alliances
  * The work of refugee literature and critical refugee studies

Please submit an abstract (500 words) and brief bio (100 words) to
Timothy K. August ((timothy.august /at/ stonybrook.edu)), Vinh Nguyen
((vinh.nguyen /at/ uwaterloo.ca)), and Evyn Lê Espiritu
((evyn.espiritu /at/ berkeley.edu)) by *April 15, 2016*.

_________________________________________________

*COMPLETE ARCHIVE NOW AVAILABLE! *

*/Canadian Review of American Studies Online/*now offers a comprehensive
resource for the best work being done in American Studies today. /CRAS
Online/ now includes the complete archive of current and previously
published articles – more than 1200 articles, reviews and commentaries –
going back to 1970(issue1.1). www.utpjournals.com/cras
<http://www.utpjournals.com/cras>

//

*/Canadian Review of American Studies/**is available online at*

*Project MUSE*- http://bit.ly/cras_pm

*/CRAS Online/*- http://bit.ly/crasonline

*Submissions to /Canadian Review of American Studies/*

/The Canadian Review of American Studies/is published three times a
year. The journal publishes articles, review articles, and short
reviews; its purpose is to further multi- and interdisciplinary analyses
of the culture of the United States and of the social relations between
the United States and Canada. The journal invites contributions, in
English and French, from authors in all relevant scholarly disciplines
related to the study of the United States, and the United States and
Canada, as well as to the borders “in-between.” The Canadian Review of
American Studies has an international standing, attracting submissions
and participation from many countries in North America and Europe.

Recently, the journal has received and published articles from the
following disciplines: Anthropology, English, History, American Studies,
Canadian Studies, Political Science, Sociology, Communication, Law,
African-American Studies, Religious Studies, Economics, Fine Arts,
Cultural Studies, and Humanities.

*For submission guidelines, please visithttp://bit.ly/crasonline or
contact us at:*

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) <mailto:(cras /at/ carleton.ca)>

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