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[ecrea] International PhD course ANALYSING THE PRACTICES OF (ORGANISED) CULTURAL ENCOUNTERS
Wed May 13 02:00:22 GMT 2015
International PhD course and workshop
ANALYSING THE PRACTICES OF (ORGANISED) CULTURAL ENCOUNTERS
November 4-6th 2015
Venue: Roskilde University, Cultural Encounters
Roskilde, Denmark
Contents:
The PhD course will consist of a 2-day research seminar with
international keynotes and panel sessions and a 1-day interactive PhD
workshop.
The aim of the seminar is to explore practice-oriented analytical
frameworks within the field of cultural encounters. How may we
conceptualise and analyse the practices that constitute social
interactions associated with cultural encounters? And in particular: how
may we analyse transformative aspects of these practices?
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:
Mariana Valverde (University of Toronto)
Dace Dzenovska (Oxford University, COMPAS)
Anne-Line Dalsgård (Århus University)
“Cultural encounters” has become an increasingly popular term, which is
used in a variety of ways across the humanities and social sciences. In
this seminar we are in particular interested in formalised encounters
that are self-consciously organised around notions of cultural
difference in order to do something to, with or for these differences.
Formalised encounters of this kind may for instance be related to
institutional practices/interventions; social work and governance;
educational settings; religious and spiritual spaces or associations and
NGOs working to promote cultural dialogue. The transformative ideas
associated with these encounters may analytically be conceptualised
through the use of figures/metaphors like the laboratory, the ritual,
the classroom, the kitchen or the greenhouse.
In the research group, which organises this seminar, we have coined the
notion organised cultural encounters (OCEs) to explore the kind of
social spaces, described above. OCEs are scripted spaces, where the
organisers intend to manage and/or harvest from cultural differences in
various ways. OCEs are invested with high hopes of a transformation that
may also have an effect outside (or indeed after) the particular
encounter. In the research group, we are both interested in the scripts
governing the set-up of particular encounters, and in the interactions
that occur because of, despite, or in opposition to the scripts.
The aim of the PhD workshop is to give participants an opportunity to
work explicitly on their analytical frameworks in dealing with practices
pertaining to cultural encounters of various kinds. During interactive
sessions, we will explore the effects and limitations of various
analytical approaches, for instance:
• What might be made (im-)possible or (in-)visible through adopting
particular analytical strategies, and what are the consequences of these
choices, as opposed to others?
• How may one work dialogically, drawing on multiple interpretative
frameworks and utilizing ambiguities, doubts, confusions and uncertainties?
• How may one articulate and work analytically with particular elements
of empirical material, such as researcher’s embodied/sensory impressions
or histories/spatiotemporalities and materalities of cultural encounters?
Format:
The PhD workshop will be structured around group discussions of
participant papers with senior researchers and PhD students. The
discussions will be informed by the preceding seminar sessions, as well
as perspectives from the course literature. There will also be some time
for writing and joint discussions in plenum.
Literature:
List of readings (max. 300 pages) will be made available by the end of
August 2015. Selection of texts will be based on the theme of the
seminar and abstracts submitted by course participants.
Requirements:
In order to be awarded course credit, the participants are required to
submit a course paper of 5-6 pages (absolute maximum 10 standard pages,
2400 characters per page) prior to the course. The paper should consist
of 1-2 pages of empirical material related to practice of cultural
encounters (excerpts from field notes, interviews, etc.) and a proposal
for one or more analytical frameworks or strategies, as well as initial
considerations regarding the effects of these analytical choices. After
submission deadline, papers will be circulated. Participants will be
requested to read the papers of their respective group and to be an
opponent for one of these.
Participation is free of charge for all PhD students, and we will
provide seminar materials, as well as beverages and lunch during the
conference. Participants are responsible for their own travel and
accommodation costs. Successful participation will be awarded with 4 ECTS.
Organisers:
Lene Bull Christiansen, Lise Paulsen Galal, Kirsten Hvenegård-Lassen,
Linda Lapina, Astrid Andersen
Deadlines:
Abstract submission: Please send an abstract of 250 words by June 15th
by e-mail to (llapina /at/ ruc.dk). Applicants will be notified of acceptance
by July 1st.
Paper submission: October 15th
PhD students are also welcome to submit abstracts for paper
presentations at the seminar.
BACKGROUND
The international research seminar Analysing the practices of
(organised) cultural encounters is organised by the research project:
“The organized cultural encounter: rethinking the conceptual and
contextual framework of interculturality through the study of practice”.
It is hosted by Department of Culture and Identity at Roskilde
University, Denmark, and is funded by The Danish Council for Independent
Research, Humanities (DFF – 1319-00093).
The project examines how cultural differences are practiced and thus
produced and reproduced within settings that are organised around the
attention to cultural diversity considered an obstacle or challenge.
Five different cases of organised cultural encounters (OCE) (interfaith
dialogue meetings, volunteer programmes, dance culture, management
training courses, arts-based method) are examined. Taking a point of
departure in social practices, the theoretical perspective is
cross-disciplinary and aims at understanding how processes of cultural
subjectification, performance, performativity, and reflexivity are
constitutive of OCEs. See more about the project at the project’s
website: http://organisedculturalencounter.wordpress.com/
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