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[Commlist] 2020 Cultural Studies Association (CSA) Conference in Chicago
Tue Dec 10 22:57:34 GMT 2019
Call for Proposals
*2020 Cultural Studies Association (CSA) Conference*
*Eighteenth Annual Meeting of the Cultural Studies Association (USA)*
*Columbia College Chicago, Chicago, Illinois*
*May 28-May 30, 2020
**EXTENDED DEADLINE: Monday, Jan 20, 2020*
SUBMIT A PROPOSAL <https://easychair.org/conferences/submissions?a=23379640>
Proposals are submitted throughEasyChair. <https://easychair.org/>For
best results, sign into EasyChair before clicking submit above.
NOTE: Proposals are submitted through EasyChair. For best results, sign
into EasyChair (https://easychair.org/) before trying to submit to the
conference (https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=csa20200).
*This Year's Theme: *Bodily Sovereignty and Collective Action
The Cultural Studies Association (CSA) invites proposals for
participation in its eighteenth annual meeting. Proposals on all topics
relevant to cultural studies will be considered, with priority given to
proposals that engage this year's theme of Bodily Sovereignty and
Collective Action. Membership of the CSA is not required to submit a
proposal for this year’s conference, but membership is required in order
to present at the conference.
The notion of sovereignty is up for serious epistemological debate. We
encourage proposals that investigate and consider how the framework of
sovereignty informs the re-mappings, re-zonings, and regressions of the
current conjuncture, and how ideas of sovereignty inform cultural
productions and resistance to these changes. At the same time, we invite
critical perspectives on sovereignty’s appropriations and strategic
deployments in contemporary and historical contexts. We take
inspiration, in particular, from the conference’s location in the city
of Chicago, which has a long history of resistance to violence and has
been a key site in the fight for bodily sovereignty, whether in the
significance of the Haymarket riot in the struggle for global labor
rights, the legendary Jane Collective’s work restoring women’s bodily
sovereignty before Roe v. Wade, the ongoing collective resistance to
police brutality, and the still countercultural notion that Black Lives
Matter. We encourage proposals that draw on these legacies and
illuminate paths in which they prefigure sovereign futures.
Furthermore, we welcome proposals that consider who can lay claim to
sovereignty, as well as the formations of power, knowledge, and capital
that circumscribe such claims. Proposals might, for example, question
which bodies--human and non-human--“count” as sovereign, and at which
historical, political, socio-ecological, and cultural points. We invite
theoretical interventions that situate these emergent questions around
self-determination with respect to critiques of (racial) capitalism,
biopolitics, hetero-patriarchy, and white supremacy.
Why This Theme, Now?
Within the U.S. and beyond, the past few years have been a turbulent and
reactionary period of social and political realignment. In the U.S.,
state level abortion bans have dangerously regressed national laws on
reproductive autonomy, while public protests and social media activism
are insisting that #TimesUp on the corporate and cultural protection of
patriarchal sexual violence. National borders are being remapped and
rezoned around the world, as in the U.S. policy that extends a
militarized national border all the way to the southern border of
Mexico, or the ongoing refugee and border crises in Western Europe
ignited by Brexit, all of which operate within a nationalist paradigm
rooted in authoritarianism, isolationism and xenophobia. As Wendy Brown
puts it in Walled States, Waning Sovereignty, these developments exhibit
“subject desires that are themselves the effect of declining
sovereignty, desires that states can neither gratify nor ignore.” In
this view, movements for autarky, for America First, for Walls and bans
arise precisely because the “potent fiction” of nation-state sovereignty
has been “compromised by growing transnational flows of capital, people,
ideas, goods, violence, and political and religious fealty.” Their aim
is to reactivate nation-state sovereignty through a violent assault on
the absolute sovereignty of migrants, refugees, the marginalized, and
stateless persons. Popular understandings of these developments is
increasingly defined by micro-targeted advertisements, feeds, and search
results made possible by the corporate and government harvesting of
personal data, channelled through proprietary algorithms that excel at
creating isolated islands of ideological sovereignty at the expense of
actual information autonomy and democratic connectivity. And amidst all
of this, environmental protections are rolled back, whether in the
Amazonian Rainforest or in Indigenous lands across North America,
continuing a centuries-long colonial assault on Indigenous/ Native
sovereignty.
Engaging with the Theme
As with past conferences, we welcome proposals from all disciplines and
topics relevant to cultural studies, including literature, history,
sociology, geography, politics, anthropology, communications, popular
culture, cultural theory, queer studies, critical race studies, feminist
studies, postcolonial studies, legal studies, science studies, media and
film studies, material culture studies, platform studies, affect
studies, visual art and performance studies. Topics that applicants
might address include, but are not limited to:
* Information/knowledge sovereignty
* Autonomy in the age of surveillance capitalism
* Autonomous infrastructure of media and cultural production
* Bodily sovereignty/ autonomy as an issue of culture and power
* Sovereignty from possessive individualism to collective claims
* Cross-Cultural conceptualizations and practices of bodily sovereignty
* Bodily sovereignty as a feminist issue
* Environmental justice, climate change and the Anthropocene
* Sovereignty and the global right’s countermovement
* Sovereignty in the media: nationalisms, populisms, and xenophobia
* Migration, mobility, and bodily sovereignty
* Anti-imperial, anti-colonial, decolonial, and abolitionist
sovereignties
* Critical disability studies on bodily sovereignties
* Queer perspectives on bodily sovereignty
* Psychoanalytic perspectives on bodily sovereignty
* Food sovereignty and food justice
* Sovereignty and intergenerational justice
* Sovereignty, community and the commons
* Post-sovereign subjects and post-sovereign ethics
The CSA aims to provide multiple and diverse spaces for the
cross-pollination of art, activism, pedagogy, design, and research by
bringing together participants from a variety of positions inside and
outside the university. Therefore, while we welcome traditional academic
papers and panels, we also encourage contributions that experiment with
alternative formats and intervene in the traditional disciplinary
formations and exclusionary conceptions and practices of the academic
(see session format options listed below). We are particularly
interested in proposals for sessions designed to document and advance
existing forms of collective action or catalyze new collaborations. We
encourage submissions from individuals working beyond the boundaries of
the university: artists, activists, independent scholars, professionals,
community organizers, and community college educators.
Important Dates:
* Submission System Open: Monday, October 14, 2019
* *EXTENDED DEADLINE for Submissions: Monday, Jan 20, 2020*
* Early Bird Registration: Tuesday, October 15, 2019 until Friday,
March 2, 2020.
* Friday, January 17, 2020: Notifications sent out
* Friday, March 2, 2020: Early Registration Ends, Regular Registration
Rate Begins
* Friday, May, 1, 2020: Last day to register to participate in the
conference. If you do not register by this date and are not a
current member, your name will be dropped from the program.
LOCATION
The 2020 conference will be held at Columbia College Chicago in Chicago,
Illinois, located in the South Loop of downtown Chicago. It is easily
accessible via public transit from both Chicago O’Hare airport and
Chicago Midway airport. A CSA hotel block for members will be announced
at a later date.
SUBMISSION PROCESS
All proposals should be submitted through Easy Chair using the following
link:
https://easychair.org/my/conference?conf=csa20200
The submission system will be open by Monday, October 14, 2019. Please
prepare all the materials required to propose your session according to
the given directions before you begin electronic submission. All program
information--names, presentation titles, and institutional
affiliations--will be based on initial conference submissions. Please
avoid lengthy presentation and session titles, use normal capitalization
and standard fonts, and include your name and affiliations as you would
like them to appear on the conference program schedule.
INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERSHIPS include individual memberships for up to seven
affiliate faculty, staff and students at member institutions. Graduate
students who wish to submit proposals are strongly encouraged to speak
with their Department Chair or Program Director about institutional
membership and where possible, make use of the complimentary individual
memberships and therefore reduced registration rates. Full benefits of
institutional membership are described here:
http://www.culturalstudiesassociation.org/institutions
<http://secure-web.cisco.com/1F2G2G19QKeznYwPicVYHNS6ilzRUBCNx_0jLpQhhDtI6MleBJnI3wKGORBPZC44wSwMW0QIUjoWZZQ0bzMc9x-ECAs7minxugOUZkM04G6iW_Z8hOrNIssagrLmuDtyEuB1S-PePp3JYC1f_U5NaT5QQZPqbakSCiyytHPJKJNheWn_oJRyBi1plBOIZ5rMPXg2JP05y4V4YdAfGeu9zpzVqrAqmP6NWHsfRgCLiU3cqP-3oT37mhQ0-V25IDA42WhQSWqRZCxXGq7VTL3HtzXLyMp_3TBaIV4EzYZKYKrMTrY8pkxfF2D6-7woTHj2EG4oXAQfnKC9P9S-v-kpbvwL1Zw-pczucMGCAnZ1tOgNsJoShyszUWbBanm36vQj5ErdfXUeZ-m8uzUmtOyc1ta8iQRUx_eIRIIcmWLtBrw5kl4fal_lpQSVLgjjlcTHb/http%3A%2F%2Fwww.culturalstudiesassociation.org%2Finstitutions>
REGISTRATION:
In order to participate in the conference and be listed in the program,
all those accepted to participate must register before Friday, May 1,
2020. And remember: registration for the conference and membership in
the CSA are separate transactions (and both are required to present).
Register here.
TRAVEL GRANTS
CSA offers a limited number of travel grants, for which graduate and
advanced undergraduate students can apply. Only those who are individual
members, have been accepted to participate, and have registered for the
conference are eligible to apply for a travel grant. Other details and
criteria are listed here: Travel grants may be found here.
<https://www.culturalstudiesassociation.org/travel-grants.html><https://www.culturalstudiesassociation.org/travel-grants.html>
Important Note about Technology Requests: accepted participants should
send their technology requests to Michelle Fehsenfeld at
(contact /at/ culturalstudiesassociation.org)
<mailto:(contact /at/ culturalstudiesassociation.org)>. Technology requests
must be made by Friday, May 1, 2020.
CONFERENCE FORMATS
While we accept individual paper proposals, we especially encourage
submissions of pre-constituted sessions. Proposals with participants
from multiple institutions will be given preference.
All sessions are 90 minutes long. All conference formats are intended to
encourage the presentation and discussion of projects at different
stages of development and to foster intellectual exchange and
collaboration. Please feel free to adapt the suggested formats or
propose others in order to suit your session’s goals. If you have any
questions, please address them to Michelle Fehsenfeld at:
(contact /at/ culturalstudiesassociation.org)
<mailto:(contact /at/ culturalstudiesassociation.org)>
PRE-CONSTITUTED PAPER PANELS: Pre-constituted panels allow 3-4
individuals to each offer 15-20 minute presentations, leaving 30-45
minutes of the session for questions and discussion. Panels should have
a chair/moderator and may have a discussant. Proposals for
pre-constituted panels must include: the title of the panel; the name,
title affiliation, and contact information of the panel organizer; the
names, titles, affiliations, and email addresses of all panelists, and a
chair and/or discussant; a description of the panel's topic (<500
words); and abstracts for each presentation (<150 words).
Pre-constituted panels are preferred to individual paper submissions.
INDIVIDUAL PAPERS: Individuals may submit a proposal to present a 15-20
minute paper. Selected papers will be combined into panels at the
discretion of the Program Committee. Individual paper proposals must
include: the title of the paper; the name, title, affiliation, and email
address of the author; and an abstract of the paper (<500 words).
ROUNDTABLES: Roundtables allow a group of participants to convene with
the goal of generating discussion around a shared concern. In contrast
to panels, roundtables typically involve shorter position or dialogue
statements (5-10 minutes) in response to questions distributed in
advance by the organizer. The majority of roundtable sessions should be
devoted to discussion. Roundtables are limited to no more than five
participants, including the organizer. We encourage roundtables
involving participants from different institutions, centers, and
organizations. Proposals for roundtables must include: the title of the
roundtable; the name, title, affiliation, and contact information of the
roundtable organizer; the names, titles, affiliations, and email
addresses of the proposed roundtable participants; and a description of
the position statements, questions, or debates that will be under
discussion (<500 words).
PRAXIS SESSIONS: Praxis sessions allow a facilitator or facilitating
team to set an agenda, pose opening questions, and/or organize hands-on
participant activities, collaborations, or skill-shares. Successful
praxis sessions will be organized around a specific objective,
productively engage a cultural studies audience, and orient itself
towards participants with minimal knowledge of the subject matter.
Sessions organized around the development of ongoing creative, artistic,
and activist projects are highly encouraged. The facilitator or team is
responsible for framing the session, gathering responses and results
from participants, helping everyone digest them, and (where applicable)
suggesting possible fora for extending the discussion. Proposals for
praxis sessions must include: the title of the session; the name, title,
affiliation, and contact information the facilitators; a brief statement
explaining the session’s connection to the conference theme and
describing the activities to be undertaken (<500 words) and a short
description of the session (<150 words) to appear in the conference
program. Please direct any questions about praxis sessions to Michelle
Fehsenfeld at (contact /at/ culturalstudiesassociation.org)
<mailto:(contact /at/ culturalstudiesassociation.org)>
SEMINARS: Seminars are small-group (maximum 15 individuals) discussion
sessions for which participants prepare in advance of the conference. In
previous years, preparation has involved shared readings, pre-circulated
''position papers'' by seminar leaders and/or participants, and other
forms of pre-conference collaboration. We particularly invite proposals
for seminars designed to advance emerging lines of inquiry and
research/teaching initiatives within cultural studies broadly construed.
We also invite seminars designed to generate future collaborations among
conference attendees, particularly through the formation of working
groups. A limited number of seminars will be selected. Once the seminars
are chosen, a call for participants in those seminars will be announced
on the CSA webpage and listserv. Those who wish to participate in a
particular seminar must apply to the seminar leader(s) directly by March
2, 2020. Individuals interested in participating in (rather than
leading) a seminar should consult the list of seminars and the
instructions for signing up for them, to be available on the conference
website by April 13, 2020. Seminar leader(s) will be responsible for
providing the program committee with a confirmed list of participants
(names, affiliations, and email addresses required) for inclusion in the
conference program no later than May 1, 2019. Seminars will be marked in
the conference programs as either closed to non-participants or open to
all conference attendees. Proposals for seminars should include: the
title of the seminar; the name, title, affiliation, and contact
information of the seminar leader(s); and a description of the issues
and questions that will be raised in discussion and an overview of the
work to be completed by participants in advance of the seminar (<500
words). Please direct questions about seminars
(seminars /at/ culturalstudiesassociation.org)
<mailto:(seminars /at/ culturalstudiesassociation.org)>. Please note that for
them to run at the conference, seminars accepted for inclusion by the
program committee must garner a minimum of 8 participants, including the
seminar leader(s).
MEET THE AUTHOR: Author Meets Critic Sessions are designed to bring
authors of recent books deemed to be important contributions to the
field of cultural studies together with discussants selected to provide
different viewpoints. Books published one to three years before the
conference (for example, for the 2013 conference, only books published
between 2010-2012 could be nominated) are eligible for nomination. Only
CSA members may submit nominations. Self-nominations are not accepted.
WORKING GROUP CALLS FOR PROPOSAL:
WORKING GROUP SESSIONS: CSA has a number of ongoing working groups.
Working Group submissions can can either be an individual paper or
pre-constituted panel and must be made through CSA’s online EasyChair
submission portal. Choose either the Working Group Panel or Working
Group Paper tracks, complete the submission information, and choose the
appropriate working group from the drop-down menu at the bottom of the
page. Specific themed calls for some working groups are listed below;
check the Working Groups page of the CSA website for the most updated
calls: http://www.culturalstudiesassociation.org/workinggroups.
<https://www.culturalstudiesassociation.org/working-groups.html>
MAKE(R) SPACE
The Make(r) Space is a space for the collaborative and praxis driven
portions of Cultural Studies – making space for art, making space for
political activism, making space for new modes of knowledge exchange. It
is our goal that this space will be created for those that have been
historically and systemically left out of these conversations: artists,
activists, poets, and other cultural critics and makers. We want to
create a space that helps the CSA fulfill some of the implicit praxis
portion of its goals to “create and promote an effective community of
cultural studies practitioners and scholars.” Building on the poets,
dancers, painters, and activists already interested in the space, we
welcome proposals for exhibits, performances, workshops, skill shares,
story telling, and other ways of meaning-making and art-making in the
world that consider the theme of “Interventions.” We especially
encourage Make(r) Space submissions from individuals working beyond the
boundaries of the university: artists, activists, independent scholars,
professionals, community organizers, contingent faculty, and community
college educators. Please email Make(r)Space submissions by March 13,
2020 to: (makerspace /at/ culturalstudiesassociation.org)
<mailto:(makerspace /at/ culturalstudiesassociation.org)>
LATERAL WORKSHOP: Lateral, the journal of the Cultural Studies
Association invites submissions of emerging work for constructive
feedback with the Lateral editors and cultural studies scholars at the
Cultural Studies Association 2020 Conference. We especially invite
participation from junior scholars, graduate students, and those working
beyond the bounds of the university, as well as those who intend to
eventually submit their work to Lateral (workshop papers that are later
submitted to the journal will undergo regular editorial and peer
review). Participants will be notified of their acceptance into the
workshop by mid-January, and complete drafts of articles (approximately
4,000–9,000 words in length) will be due mid-May and circulated to
workshop participants at least two weeks before the conference. Strong
submissions will situate their considerations of cultural practices,
critical theories, and/or pedagogies within established and emerging
conversations on racism, capitalism, sexuality, gender, ability, and
colonialism. Prospective workshop participants, including those
presenting work at the 2020 CSA Conference, should submit abstracts (no
more than 500 words) or draft articles (approximately 4,000–9,000 words
in length) through the submission system by the deadline for
submissions. The journal can be accessed at csalateral.org
<https://csalateral.org/>
PANEL CHAIRS: We are always in need of people to serve as panel chairs.
To volunteer to do so, please submit your name, title, affiliation, and
email address, as well as a brief list of your research interests to
(sean.johnson.andrews /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(sean.johnson.andrews /at/ gmail.com)>,
Chair of the Program Committee.
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