Archive for calls, June 2017

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[ecrea] Call for Applicants: Summer Institute on "The Politics and Rhetoric of New Populisms" at Northwestern University

Fri Jun 23 21:48:26 GMT 2017




The annual Rhetoric and Public Culture Summer Institute at Northwestern University is scheduled to be held on July 17-21, 2017 (with arrival on July 16 and departure on July 22).

This year’s institute theme is: “The Politics and Rhetoric of New Populisms.” Participants of the institute will interrogate the resurgence of populism in the twenty-first century in its various manifestations, covering a wide range of political and ideological positions from the left to the right and from the progressive to the conservative across the globe. As evident from Brexit and the election of Donald Trump to the US presidency, no geopolitical region or national/culture space appears to be immune to the lures of populist movements and moments (episodic gatherings and eruptions). The persistent and historically erroneous assumption that populism is a recurrent feature of politics in developing countries under duress due to crushing poverty or uncontained internal religious or ethnic strife has been suspended for the time being. Populism (along with the very idea of “people” and the “popular rule”) are beginning to command renewed public as well as scholarly attention, which is long overdue. As such, the aim of this summer institute will be to participate in and contribute to that renewed attention.

The institute will consist of five days of presentations and discussions led by John Brenkman (English, Baruch College & Comparative Literature, The Graduate Center, CUNY), Jason Frank (Government, Cornell University), William Mazarella (Anthropology, University of Chicago) and Melanye Price (Africana Studies, Rutgers University). Each faculty member will deliver an afternoon lecture, lead a seminar discussion on selected readings (assigned in advance) the following morning, and attend a colleague’s presentation that afternoon. The overlapping format enables student and faculty participants to continue informal scholarly discussions during group lunches and dinners.

The institute is sponsored by the Center for Global Culture and Communication, an interdisciplinary initiative of Northwestern University School of Communication. The Center will subsidize transportation (up to $250), lodging, and some meals (breakfast and lunch every day and two group dinners) for admitted students. Applicants should send a brief letter of nomination from their academic advisor, along with a one-page statement explaining their interest in participating in this year’s institute, to the summer institute coordinator LaCharles Ward (LacharlesWard2017 /at/ u.northwestern.edu) <mailto:(LacharlesWard2017 /at/ u.northwestern.edu)>. We will adopt a policy of rolling admissions. Priority will therefore be granted to strong applications that are submitted in a timely fashion, *_preferably by June 30, 2017_*. All inquiries should be directed to LaCharles Ward.


This summer institute is convened by Center for Global Culture and Communication (CGCC), an interdisciplinary initiative of Northwestern University School of Communication. Dilip Gaonkar (Rhetoric and Public Culture) is the Director of CGCC.

*Faculty Bios*

*John Brenkman* is Distinguished Professor of English at Baruch College and Professor of Comparative Literature in Graduate Center at City University of New York. A literary critic and political theorist, he has written extensively about modernism, nihilism, and belief and on democracy and political thought. He is the author of /Straight Male Modern: A Cultural Critique of Psychoanalysis/ (Routledge 1993) and /The Cultural Contradictions of Democracy: Political Thought Since September 11/(Princeton University Press 2007).

*Jason Frank* is Professor in the Department of Government at Cornell University. His focus is in political theory with special interests in democratic theory, American political thought, politics and literature, and political aesthetics. He is the author of /Constituent Moments: Enacting the People in Postrevolutionary America/ (Duke, 2010) and /Publius and Political Imagination /(Rowman & Littlefield, 2013).

*William Mazzarella* is Chair and Neukom Family Professor in the Department of Anthropology and of Social Science in the College at The University of Chicago. He teaches and writes extensively on political anthropology, critical theory, and media studies. Mazzarella is the author of /Censorium: Cinema and the Open Edge of Mass Publicity/ (Duke, 2013) and /The Mana of Mass Society/ (Chicago, 2017).

*Melanye Price* is Associate Professor of Africana Studies at Rutgers University. She teaches courses in public opinion, black politics, social movements, and political psychology. She is the author of /Dreaming Blackness: Black Nationalism and African American Public Opinion/ (NYU, 2006) and /The Race Whisperer: Barack Obama and the Political Uses of Race/ (NYU, 2016).


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