Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Calls for Papers, Workshops, and Resources, March 21, 2017

CONFERENCES
H2O: Life and Death
15 & 16 September, 2017, University of Adelaide (Australia)
Waters are contested entities that are currently at the centre of most scientific discussions about sustainability. Discourse around water management underlines both the serious absence and devastating overabundance of water: rising sea levels compete against desertification; hurricanes and floods follow periods of prolonged drought.  We are interested in examining water as a simultaneously scientific and symbolic, material and imaginary, practical and aesthetic medium within lived communities. By exploring waters, and how their absence or presence shapes our sense of identity and belonging, this conference aims to question and potentially challenge our cultural construction and representation of water in order to reimagine how we might relate to waters. We are particularly interested in how art responds to the precarity and injustice arising from water distribution and use; and how we can navigate growing discrepancies in the impacts of watery ‘disasters’.
Please send a 200 word abstract along with a short biography to Camille.Rouliere@adelaide.edu.au before May 16, 2017.


2017 Midwest Popular Culture Association/Midwest American Culture Association Conference
The 2017 Midwest Popular Culture Association / American Culture Association conference will be held at the Hyatt Regency St. Louis at the Arch from Wednesday-Sunday October 18-22.
Proposal deadline: April 30
Submit proposals here: http://submissions.mpcaaca.org/
Subject areas: http://mpcaaca.org/areas/


Social Practice of Human Rights Conference
 SPHR 2017 explores challenges to advocacy posed by racism, xenophobia, other forms of extremism, and what Pope Francis has termed “the globalization of indifference.” The plenaries focus on the need for new strategies to confront three interconnected human rights challenges that have taken on alarming dimensions: conflict and the challenge of peace, forced migration, and modern-day slavery.
We invite proposals from scholars, practitioners, policymakers, and advocates on a broad array of human rights topics. The Center welcomes both theoretical and applied research proposals that capture important trends in human rights scholarship and research. We encourage the submission of individual papers, complete panels, roundtables, workshops and practitioner presentations, as well as interdisciplinary and scholar-practitioner collaborations.
Deadline for submissions: March 31, 2017
Contact Email: hrc@udayton.edu


Philosophy of Communication Conference
Duquesne University – Pittsburgh, PA, June 5–7, 2017
The theme for this year’s conference centers on the Catholic Intellectual Tradition with keynote speakers addressing four content areas: (1) Philosophy of Communication and Narrative Ground, (2) Philosophy of Communication, History, and Institutions, (3) Philosophy of Communication and Community, and (4) Philosophy of Communication, Culture, and Mission.
Send all submissions to cec@duq.edu by April 15, 2017.
Contact Email:  cec@duq.edu


Creating Historical Knowledge Socially
26-28 October 2017, Washington DC
This event seeks to assess through international dialogue the state-of-the-art in the use of community-sourcing, crowdsourcing, citizen science and other public-based collaborative approaches to create historical knowledge. The development of dynamic internet-based technologies has allowed researchers not only to share their work with broader audiences, but to involve publics in the processes of knowledge creation. This event is intended as an opportunity to reflect upon the impact of collective knowledge creation on conceptions of history, historical methodology, and Quellenkritik and to think about how citizen science might change the discipline of history and the knowledge it produces.
This event will focus on the methodological and theoretical implications of citizen science for historical scholarship, and it will also explore how approaches, systems, and standards to include citizen scholars in research can be designed and implemented to ensure quality of data, accuracy of results, and inclusivity of perspective.
Please submit proposals by April 7, 2017
For further information regarding format and concept of the event please contact Dr. Matthew Hiebert (hiebert@ghi-dc.org).


Activists Scholarship in Human Rights
Wednesday 28th June 2017, University of London
This conference aims to facilitate a productive exchange between scholars and activists, working within the broad interdisciplinary field of human rights, on the epistemological, methodological and ethical challenges in activist scholarship.
Activist scholarship can be broadly defined as politically engaged scholarship which aims at furthering social justice. It is constituted by a ‘shared commitment to basic principles of social justice that is attentive to inequalities of race, gender, class and sexuality and aligned with struggles to confront and eliminate them’ (Hale, 2008). Offering a new form of knowledge production, activist scholarship attempts to bridge the divide between theory and practice and researcher and the researched subject. This is reflected in its diverse methodological approaches which emphasize direct engagement with the research participants at each phase of the research from research design to data collection and dissemination. In that sense, activist scholarship radically questions what is deemed valid or legitimate scholarship emphasizing the significance of knowledge produced by communities and social movements.
We invite individual paper, panel and roundtable proposals to be submitted to hrc@sas.ac.uk by 17th April 2017.


Mid-America Conference on Hispanic Literatures
October 26-28, 2017 in St. Louis, MO
The organizing committee seeks proposals for individual presentations and special sessions on any aspect of the literatures and cultures of the Iberian Peninsula or Latin America, written in Spanish, English or Portuguese. Panels or individual proposals related to the conference theme, New Cartographies in Iberian and Latin American Studies are especially encouraged.
We welcome alternatives to the traditional format of three to four papers: roundtables, workshops, lightning talks, workshops, pecha kucha, etc. Please note that we discourage panels from groups of scholars coming from the same institution.
Send panel proposals and 250-word abstracts for individual papers by March 31, 2017 to: machl@wustl.edu.


Radicalism and the University
The School of Philosophy and Art History (SPAH) at the University of Essex would like to invite you to participate in an interdisciplinary conference on the timely subject of radicalism and what role, if any, the institution of the University has to play in it.
Topics of Interest include, but are not limited to:
- The marketization / commodification of radicalism by the University.
- The antagonism (or lack thereof) between the University and government policy.
- The difference or similarity between radical left and right wing political movements.
- Contemporary practices in philosophy, politics, aesthetics, etc. that can be called radical
- If radicalism is a realistic project/promise for academia to pursue.
- What effect, if any, these questions pose to the University as a political space.
- Does Art have radical potential as institutional criticism?
-What does radical art practice look like?
The deadline to submit an abstract is April 14th, 2017.
Contact Email: cr16174@essex.ac.uk


Book History and Digital Humanities
Sept 22-24, UW-Madison
Often celebrated and criticized as the next big thing in humanist research and teaching, “the digital humanities” get a lot of press for shaking up the way things are done. But is “dh” a continuation of some of the most “traditional” scholarly work in the humanities: bibliography, textual criticism, and book history? This conference, convened by the Center for the History of Print and Digital Culture at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, aims to study how digital humanities grows out book history, how “bh” and “dh” continue to be mutually informative and generative, and how also they contradict each other.
This conference is an occasion to think broadly and provocatively about fields and formats – to trace these genealogies and debate their meaning, to think about what difference it makes to position the hand written or printed word on a continuum with digital inscription rather than insisting the latter is a clean break from the former, and to broaden views about whose labor – intellectual and physical – makes all kinds of reading, writing, and scholarship possible.
Deadline: April 15
Contact Email:  printculture@slis.wisc.edu


Queer Subjects and the Contemporary United States
Queen Mary, University of London, 5th August 2017, 9am-6pm
Recent upheaval from the Trump administration’s policy-making in the United States has seen the lives of queer subjects radically altered. This has included numerous executive orders that seek to curtail the power and agency of certain groups based on race, disability, gender, and sexuality particularly. Such identity distinctions are being made through an increasingly nationalist, and therefore heteronormative, lens which lends itself to the supremacy of ideals that support hegemonic cultural discourse.
This one-day colloquium aims to highlight queer subjectivities in the contemporary context of the United States, and seeks to uncover modes of resistance and ways in which the queer subject can lay claim to public and private spaces within both the nation-state and its outward global effects. We invite considerations, especially interdisciplinary, from the fields of American Studies, Literary Studies, Queer Theory, Memory Studies and Critical Race Theory among many others.
Abstracts of 300 words and a short bio are due by 15th May 2017.
Contact Email:  c.clark@uea.ac.uk


The United Nations and Decolonization after World War II
Tulane University, on June 8-9
In current debates about the origins of the United Nations (UN), is commonly understood that the organization was conceived as an instrument for the defense of the colonial powers’ interests. Guided by colonial paternalism, the UN established a distinction between “non-self-governing territories”, which were entitled solely to self-government, and the “trusteeship system”, which intended to conduct the colonies to independence. While the UN Charter stipulated that the colonial powers had to transmit technical and statistical information in respect to the conditions in the non-self-governing territories, it only established mechanisms for international supervision concerning the territories placed under the trusteeship system.
Recent work exploring this dynamic has increased our understanding of both the achievements and the limits of the UN support for the independence of colonized territories. In an effort to expand this work and promote dialogue between scholars exploring the subject, we invite participants to a conference organized around the topic of the UN involvement in struggles for independence after World War II.
The deadline for application is April 15, 2017.


Indigenous Studies Area, Call for Papers: Midwest Popular Culture/ACA Conference
The Indigenous Studies Area of the Midwest Popular Culture Association seeks panels and paper abstracts for the annual Midwest Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association conference to be held at the Hyatt Regency St. Louis at the Arch from Wednesday-Sunday, October 18-22.
Abstracts may address any aspect of Aboriginal, First Nations, Maori, Sami, and other Indigenous popular cultures. In addition, the area highly encourages comparative papers between Indigenous and, say, Asian, Latin American, Pacific Islander, or African popular cultures.
250 word abstracts may be submitted electronically before or by April 30, 2017 via the online submission system, http://submissions.mpcaaca.org.
Send questions and inquiries to the Area Chair, Anthony Adah at adahan@mnstate.edu



PUBLISHING
Women in Politics: An International Perspective
This interdisciplinary volume discusses women’s leadership, representation in parliament, women’s rights, cultural barriers, and democratization process. Gender inequality remains one of the most important questions and a major barrier to human development. This interdisciplinary edited collection Women in Politics: An International Perspective (under contract with Cambridge Scholars Publishing) focuses on women’s political participation and activities. The concept of intersectionality is crucial for this work as an important analytic and methodological tool. This study contributes to political science, women's studies, feminist philosophy, and history. Please send your proposals and your CV to Dr. Elena Shabliy shabliy@fas.harvard.edu by March 31. 
Contact Email:  shabliy@fas.harvard.edu


CRISES OF THE LIBERAL ’WEST’
Ever after the idea of “the Western civilization” was conceived, some intellectuals, politicians, and religious leaders have spelled doom for it. The “Western world” has been frequently embroiled in societal, ethical and economic crises, some of the most recent being war on terrorism, recession, and the influx of refugees. The rise of populist parties and inauguration of Donald J. Trump as the President of the United States have further fueled narratives of a crisis-ridden West. The themes and narratives of the Western crisis have been recycled habitually and have often been accompanied by, or at least addressed, the idea of the West as a globally triumphant entity with universally applicable values.  Currently, it seems, what is at stake is the “Western” liberal world-order. Recent political changes have created new challenges for liberal internationalism, and subsequently, crisis rhetoric has become a commonplace, but also controversial, part of narratives about the “liberal West” and its survival.
We are calling for articles for an edited volume focusing specifically on contemporary economic, ethnic, military, political, socio-cultural, and other crises that have emerged during the last decade, either in narrated or empirically lived reality. We especially encourage perspectives from political and social sciences, contemporary history, cultural studies, international relations, and geopolitics.
Send your abstract, max 350 words to: jukka.jouhki[at]jyu.fi
Deadline for abstracts: May 23, 2017.
The editors are members of the coordinating team of The West Network, an international interdisciplinary network of scholars. Visit us at https://thewestnetwork.org.


WHY WORLD LITERATURE?
What we look for in this volume is to understand if ‘world’ as a category can be used analytically. A lot of theorization of ‘world’ in world literature mystifies the term and makes it into a descriptive, flat, essentialist filter that betrays a set of globalized (Euro-American), institutionalized values. We need a concrete theorising which is able to critique these values as well as to understand the dynamics of power and contestation that the interface of the world and the local holds. What is the meaning of the term world literature for a country that has suffered centuries of colonial exploitation and hegemony and tries to find autonomy sandwiched now between the residues of the past and the increasing Americanisation of the present? We invite articles that engage with the varied polemics in the contemporary field of ‘world literature’ and give us insightful, enabling and critical readings of the term and of the field.
Prospective papers should be sent to editors@sanglap-journal.in by May 15, 2017
Contact Email:  editors@sanglap-journal.in


The Politics of Boycotts
This issue of the Radical History Review seeks to contribute historical depth and comparative breadth to recent discussions around the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) campaign in support of Palestine. Our aim is to create a broad basis for historical and strategic discussion by exploring a variety of spatio-temporal scales of political action opened up by boycott campaigns, from visions of global solidarity to hyper localized social movements, and from the strategic deployment of historical comparisons to claims of singularity. We recognize that not all boycotts are progressive, and that as a tactic they have been used by different groups for a variety of political ends. We therefore welcome studies that challenge conventional ideas of what a boycott is as well as historical case studies of boycott campaigns from around the globe such as the eponymous campaign during the Irish Land War, the abolitionist boycott of sugar, the non-cooperation movement in colonial India, the anti-Nazi boycott, the Montgomery Bus Boycott, and the international cultural and academic boycott of Apartheid South Africa. We seek studies that would be useful to activists as well as theoretical or comparative reflections on the present and future of boycotts as a form of nonviolent political action.
Abstract Deadline: September 1, 2017
Contact Email:  contactrhr@gmail.com


Pacific Northwest Quarterly
Pacific Northwest Quarterly is a scholarly, peer-reviewed journal of northwest history—the region comprising Alaska, British Columbia, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and western Montana. Any topic pertaining to the history of some portion of this region or of the American West is appropriate, but the editor looks especially for something new in the way of scholarship or some new analysis of an old topic. Essays that are strictly anthropological, economic, architectural, or otherwise specialized will not be considered, nor will pieces that focus on current events, but interdisciplinary treatments are welcome, and comparative studies particularly so.
Contact Email:  pnq@uw.edu


freedom of expression and feminism issue: fe journal
Where do feminist and LGBTQ tools and practices of knowledge and communication stand in the crisis of expression? What about feminist academic and non academic journals? Blogs? What are international, national and/or transnational feminist tools/ instruments /practices of struggle that can act against the contemporary crisis of expression in Turkey?  Does feminist civil society have any duties? How far have we fulfilled these duties? How far along shall we go? Is a feminist academy outside the university possible? How are labor relations shaped during the crisis of expression? What are experiences, insights and feminist coping strategies of struggle?
For this special issue, we are not only expecting papers from law and political sciences but also from humanities, cinema, journalism etc. Please send us support with your ideas and analysis!
Latest date for sending articles is October 1, 2017.
Contact Email:  fejournal@gmail.com


Fashion, Dress, and Post-Postmodernism
Scholars have argued that postmodernism is dead and that we are entering into a new era. A variety of terms have been used to describe the new condition and dominant trends. These include altermodernism, automodernity, digimodernism, hypermodernity, performatism, and post-postmodernism.  Morgado[1] links post-postmodern theory to dress, fashion and appearance by offering these theoretical connections: mass customization; excessive consumption of fashion goods mixed with anxiety over environmental impact and personal debt; excessive or haphazard decorative detail; blurred distinctions between fashion and art; appearance modes that transcend rigid gender categories; technology and dress; fashion blogs and the democratizing of fashion reporting; collaborations between high-end and low-end brands. Our goal with this book is to expand on Morgado’s work to examine the usefulness and potential of the concept of post-postmodernism relative to dress and fashion.
Please submit proposals to areilly@hawaii.edu or jblanco@dom.edu no later than September 15, 2017


Watched: Academic Freedom in the Age of Anti-Intellectualism
Given the most recent election cycle, the current socio-political climate reflects a growing reality of anti-intellectual sentiments across the United States. While the digital age has ushered in one of the greatest eras of access to information, unfortunately there does not seem to be a subsequent escalation in critically engaged thought across the U.S. populous. Critical thinking, critical media literacy and intellectualism in general appear to be declining in social value. In fact, recent studies indicate that the average person is far less likely to decipher between factual versus non-factual popular and social news and media. Additionally, even when fact checking occurs in real-time by accredited research clearinghouses, as during presidential and vice-presidential debates, masses are extremely likely to dismiss and defend non-reputable discourse as long as the talking figures remain likable, charismatic, and/or of high entertainment value.
This call for multi-disciplinary papers, auto-ethnographic reflections, and interviews ask for submissions that challenge such assumptions and practices, as well as engage in strategies to address narratives and outcomes of academic freedom in these social-political times.
Please send abstracts between 250-300 words for submissions to srose@uccs.edu by March 31, 2017. 


B(l)ack Futures - Flat Time in Black Performance
This special issue plays against African American theater scholar Harry Elam’s discussion of playing the past in the present in the work of August Wilson (Elam 2005) and current discourses of new materialism and post-humanity to explore the specificity and malleability of time and futurity in Black performance.  Riffing off of the past, imperfect and future tenses of black life captured in transnational and intersectional representations of black performance, the works in this special issue will move back and forth across time to flatten past and present performances and forms of black expression that foreshadow and shape black futures the 21st century. This volume explores black life in the 21st century in flat-time, or in perpetual suspension, without promise of release or relief, to understand how the present has been materially and psychically shaped by the past. We see flat time as a conditional structure of perpetual present that makes future projections of black performance contingent and vulnerable to perpetual looping of past experiences of anti-black violence and trauma.
The deadline for submission of proposals is 31 May 2017


Social Justice and Post-Truth Politics
'Post-Truth', the Oxford Dictionary’s 2016 Word of the Year, relates or denotes 'circumstances in which objective facts are less influential in shaping public opinion than appeals to emotion and personal belief'. Brexit, the US elections and the spread of 'fake news' are just a few examples of a general erosion of trust in traditional political structures and institutions. In response, new forms of protest and resistance are emerging against growing social divisions and politics of exclusion. Evental Aesthetics seeks submissions that reflect on the notion of 'post-truth' and social justice.
Submission and formatting requirements, along with further information on Collisions, are available at http://eventalaesthetics.net/submissions/
Contact Email:  eventalaesthetics@gmail.com



FUNDING
Research Travel Grants, American Heritage Center
The American Heritage Center offers travel grants to provide support for travel, food and lodging to carry out research using the AHC's collections.
The Center’s collections support a wide range of research in political and cultural history and the uses of landscape. Past grantees have studied topics ranging from western water rights and the development of urban pedestrian malls to food cultures in the American borderlands and the cultural resonance of Lassie.
Applications for this summer are due April 14, 2017Travel Grants Application (PDF). Information about collections is available at the AHC website at http://www.uwyo.edu/ahc/collections/.
Contact Email:  bridget.burke@wyoming.edu


Fordham-NYPL Research Fellowships in Jewish Studies
Fordham University’s Jewish Studies Program and the New York Public Library are delighted to announce joint short-term and mid-term research fellowships in Jewish Studies for the 2017-2018 academic year. This joint pilot fellowship program is open to scholars in all fields of Jewish Studies from outside the New York City metropolitan area seeking to conduct on-site research in the New York Public Library, especially the Dorot Jewish Division.
The short-term fellowship will consist of a stipend of $1,000 per week for a minimum of two and maximum of four weeks. Mid-term fellowships will be available for Spring semester (January 15, 2018-May 15, 2018), and will offer a stipend of $20,000. A subsidy for travel may be available.  For the duration of the fellowship, fellows will receive an affiliation with Fordham University. The successful fellows will give one public presentation and a faculty seminar.
Deadline: April 30


James P. Danky Fellowship
In honor of James P. Danky's long service to print culture scholarship, the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Center for the History of Print and Digital Culture, in conjunction with the Wisconsin Historical Society, is again offering its annual short-term research fellowship (http://www.wiscprintdigital.org/fellowship/).
Applications are due by May 1.
Contact Email:  printculture@slis.wisc.edu


Graduate Fellowship for Research in Japan
The KCC Japan Education Exchange Graduate Fellowships Program was established in 1996 to support qualified graduate students for research or study in Japan. The purpose of the fellowship is to support future American educators who will teach more effectively about Japan. One fellowship of $30,000 will be awarded. Applicants may affiliate with Kobe College (Kobe Jogakuin) for award year, if selected (but it is not required).
Completed applications and all supporting materials must be submitted to the KCC Japan Education Exchange email address: kccjee@comcast.net no later than April 15th, 2017. 



WORKSHOPS
Labour, Rights, and Mobility
29 October – 5 November 2017, Buenos Aires, Argentina
The international research centre Work and Human Lifecycle in Global History (re:work) at Humboldt University Berlin and the Universidad Nacional de San Martin in Buenos Aires will hold a Summer Academy exploring the historical and contemporary connections between labour, mobility and rights in a global perspective. The Summer Academy aims to meet the challenges of a broader discussion on the connections of labour and rights, avoiding Eurocentric approaches. It allows for studies that shed light on multiple forms of work and social conflict, including non-wage labour, as well as on the multiple historical connections between forms of social and political organization and shared perceptions of justice and injustice. Finally, the Summer Academy will also consider the ways in which race, gender, ethnicity and other social markers shaped notions of justice and injustice in relation to work and labour.
Application deadline: 15 April 2017

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