[Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Call for Papers: Migrant Workers, Cultural (Re)Production, and the Culture Industry in South Asia
Mon Aug 01 12:32:14 GMT 2022
Call for Papers: Migrant Workers, Cultural (Re)Production, and the
Culture Industry in South Asia
*An International Conference*
*Organized by*
*The Cultural Studies Cell*
*School of Arts and Humanities, Christ University, Bangalore*
**in collaboration with*
*
*The Department of Sociology, Tezpur University, Assam*
*
*
*Conference Dates: 17 & 18 Oct 2022*
Thinking about culture is overwhelmingly spatially fixed in the context
of migration. Thus, studies at the intersection of migration and culture
are concerned with the many ways in which cultures are affected and
transformed both at the source and the destination. This has been
largely true across disciplines but especially so in anthropology,
cultural studies, literary studies, history, sociology, and allied
fields. Theoretical concepts and frameworks such as multiculturalism,
liminality, acculturation, assimilation, roots, etc. assume a stable and
fairly clearly demarcated territories at various scales (city, nation,
regions, etc.) where people are separated along the lines of hosts and
outsiders. Notions of belongingness and identity are a consequence of
such assumptions in scholarship, politics, and governance.
The first critical move this conference seeks to make is to *question
this restrictive receptacle view of migration and culture* and calls for
an alternative framework of investigating cultural transformations in
the context of migration. It aims to do so by being attentive to the
fact that migration is a flow, a phenomenon with entropy constitutive of
the phenomenon. Rootedness and by extension uprootedness are strong
concepts to think about migration, however such an approach limits our
understanding of migration as both product of and contributor to
cultural dispersion. Instead of viewing culture as being accumulative
within territories and boundaries, we propose that it be seen as being
inherently on the move and transgressive of geo-political boundaries,
through multiple flows such as those of capital, technology, languages,
and people themselves.
Workers on the move are figures of defiance as they are in motion. They
may be made subjects in the form of lascars, slaves, indentured workers,
or walking during a nationwide lockdown during the pandemic; they carry
rebellion, form collectives, and demand autonomy and liberation not only
where their ‘source’ or ‘destination’ are but in the course of moving
itself.
The subsequent critical move the conference makes is to identify the
culture industry as an important field in which the subjectivities of
the migrant workers find articulation. There is an interesting dialectic
at play between migrant workers and the culture industry especially as
cultural production, circulation, and consumption are increasingly
becoming digital. In a way, migrant workers are creating cultural
artefacts as they are moving. They are also using digital technologies
and social and mass media to bring to the surface the struggles they
have to face. One of the prime examples is the way technology was used
during the 2020 lockdown in India when migrant workers had to walk
thousands of miles to get back ‘home’. The cultural archive that was
created during this period beckons urgent critical engagement. Another
aspect is the way the mainstream culture industry appropriates cultural
identities and expressions of migrant workers sublating them into large
scale production of cultural commodities (cinema, music, etc.).
This conference is an invitation to reflect upon such dialectics of
cultural production and consumption through a focus on migration. We
invite papers addressing these issues from various theoretical and
empirical perspectives and locations. We are especially interested in
papers from South Asia and other regions of the Global South.
*Indicative themes include (but are not limited to):*
Migrants’ agency in media production and consumption
Migrants, music & film cultures
Migration and transformations in the urban cultural landscape
Popular media forms addressing issues around migration
Migrants, Cultural Representation, and Intersectional Identities
Global diasporas and cultural forms
*Contact Info: *Please submit an abstract (300 words) and a
short-bio (50-100 words) (tomithilesh.kumar /at/ christuniversity.in)
<mailto:(mithilesh.kumar /at/ christuniversity.in)>;
(rashmi.sawhney /at/ christuniversity.in)
<mailto:(rashmi.sawhney /at/ christuniversity.in)>; (amiyadas /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(amiyadas /at/ gmail.com)>
*Submission deadline of abstracts: 15 August 2022*
*Selected participants will be informed by August 31, 2022*
*Please Note*:
Selected participants will need to share a draft of the paper and a copy
of their tickets by 30th September 2022 to confirm/secure their
participation in the Conference.
*The conference will be held on 17 & 18 October 2022 at the Tezpur
University, Assam. Participants will be required to make their own
arrangements for travel. Accommodation and food will be arranged by the
organisers.*
*Registration Fees: *Participants from the Global South: 15 USD/INR1200;
Participants from North America, Europe, Australia: 1500 USD/8000 INR
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Next message][Back to index]