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Aktuelles Call for Papers

CFP: Postcolonial Narrations: Matters of Life and Death

Deadline: May 31, 2022

October 20– 22, 2022, Bonn

The last decades have brutally shown that not all lives and bodies are equally grievable. War, increased migratory movements, the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the climate crisis demonstrate that hierarchies of life and death continue to be dominated by colonial and racialized criteria as well as  political and social power structures. In her much-referenced work Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence (2004), Judith Butler asserts that  „[s]ome lives are grievable, and others are not; the differential allocation of  grievability […] operates to produce and maintain certain exclusionary  conceptions of who is normatively human: what counts as a liveable life and a  grievable death?“ (XIV-XV). Her assessment raises further questions about the conception and boundaries of ‘the human’ and who controls them. Since the European Enlightenment the predominant understanding of ‘the human’ has been shaped by a universalizing focus on individualism and rationality. These humanist notions do not only foreground an immaterial understanding of  human essence, neglecting any question of the material existence of the  body, but more so indicate a sharp distinction between subject and object,  self and other. Recent posthumanist scholarship seeks to expose these  binaries and tries to negotiate new understandings of ‘the human’. Examining  marginalised lives and deaths through a focus on black, female, queer, or  non-human agents, critical posthumanism investigates who counts as ‘human’.  This endeavour is especially relevant in a postcolonial context, where existing  ideas of the human mind and body are continuously reconsidered, and the  imagining of alternative ways of life is a central concern. Emerging from this  framework, we hope to explore postcolonial matters of life and death in next  year’s Postcolonial Narrations Forum.  The controlling and policing of life and death, which dominate our screens  again and again in the form of racially motivated police shootings, the  discoveries of mass graves of Indigenous children, and the violence at  Europe’s borders, have long been central to colonialism and its continuous  aftermath. Consequently, the institutionalised regulation of human life and bodies has attracted notice as a major focus in literary and cultural studies,  postcolonial studies, medical and environmental humanities, and other fields.  Concepts such as biopolitics (Foucault), bare life (Agamben), necropolitics (Mbembe), and slow death (Berlant) are only a few among the many tools  which are useful to examine the abovementioned issues. Literary genres as diverse as life-writing, memoir, dystopia, and SF as well as other media have  not only voiced criticism in this regard, but have narrated forms of resistance,  resilience, and survival. These cultural trends reflect political discourses surrounding, for instance, the Black Lives Matter movement, the reclaiming of ​ bodies through mourning rituals, and #RefugeesWelcome. We would like to invite fellow PhD candidates and early career scholars to join us in a multifaceted exchange on postcolonial matters of life and death. We welcome a wide range of contributions on the following and related issues in postcolonial contexts:

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Aktuelles Call for Papers

Second Call: Canadian Landscapes / Paysages canadiens

9th Triennial Conference of the Central European Association for Canadian Studies

Budapest, Hungary, October 27-29, 2022

New deadline: April 22, 2022

http://kanadistak.hu/2022/02/03/cfp-canadian-landscapes-budapest-hungary-october-27-29-2022/

The Central European Association for Canadian Studies, in cooperation with Eötvös Loránd University, Károli Gáspár University of the Reformed Church in Hungary, Pázmány Péter Catholic University and Budapest Business School University of Applied Sciences, is pleased to announce a conference on “Canadian Landscapes” to be held in Budapest, Hungary, on October 27-29, 2022. The Conference Organizing Committee welcomes papers in English or French on literary, cultural, political, geographical, environmental, historical, artistic, as well as business and economics-related perspectives of the conference theme, including (but not limited to) the following topics:

  • cultural landscapes
  • indigenous landscapes
  • multicultural and transnational landscapes
  • climate fiction
  • petrol fiction and other resource
  • management induced landscapes
  • geological landscapes
  • ecocriticism
  • literary and cultural sustainability
  • visual arts
  • utopian and dystopian landscapes
  • (post)apocalyptic landscapes
  • landscapes in translation
  • ekphrasis
  • landscapes and identity
  • landscapes of the mind: psychological
  • fiction
  • gendered landscapes
  • posthuman landscapes
  • historical landscapes
  • landscapes: theological interpretations
  • culinary landscapes
  • demographic landscapes
  • business landscapes (tourism,
  • hospitality, finance, management,
  • accountancy, foreign trade, EU-
  • Canada relations)
  • economic landscapes

The intended program will feature keynote lectures, multiple thematic sessions, panel discussions, sessions for young Canadianists, as well as a teacher-training session and film screening.

Presentations will be 20 minutes, followed by Q&A at the end of each session.

PhD, MA and BA students are also welcome to participate with papers (with the option for BA students to deliver 10-minute presentations). Abstracts of papers (maximum 250 words) and a one-paragraph CV for those planning to deliver papers should be submitted by e-mail to the organizers at karoli.canada@gmail.com and at deak.timea@kre.hu by March 10, 2022 April 22, 2022.

A selection of papers will be published in a special, peer-reviewed journal issue devoted to the theme of the conference.

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Aktuelles Call for Papers

CFP Congrès American Council for Québec Studies (ACQS) – Colloque de jeunes chercheurs

Congrès American Council for Québec Studies (ACQS)
Baltimore, 2023 octobre 2022
Colloque de jeunes chercheurs
Baltimore, 19 octobre 2022

La date limite afin de soumettre une proposition de communication est le 15 avril 2022.

L’American Council for Québec Studies (ACQS) est heureuse d’annoncer la tenue d’un Colloque des jeunes chercheurses dans le cadre de son congrès biennal 2022. En collaboration avec l’Association internationale des études québécoises (AIEQ) et le CanadianAmerican Center, University of Maine, l’ACQS invite des chercheurs de la relève en études québécoises à présenter leur communication le 19 octobre 2022.
Les étudiantes aux cycles supérieurs de même que les professeurs en début de carrière dont les recherches portent sur le Québec sont invitées à soumettre une proposition de communication au comité de sélection. Cet évènement offrira aux jeunes chercheurs une occasion exceptionnelle de partager, toutes disciplines confondues, leurs travaux récents sur le Québec. Les perspectives comparatives seront évidemment bien
accueillies.

Les communications pourront se faire en français ou en anglais. Les candidates choisies auront l’occasion de rencontrer d’autres chercheures et bénéficieront du mentorat de professeures établies. Ilselles assisteront également au congrès de l’ACQS. Les communications jugées les meilleures seront soumises pour publication à la revue Québec Studies. L’Association internationale des études québécoises (AIEQ) assumera les frais d’inscription et de déplacement des dix meilleures candidatures, auquel s’ajoutera un montant maximum de 500$ CAD pour les frais d’hébergement.

Si votre proposition n’est pas acceptée pour le Colloque des jeunes chercheurs, elle sera transmise au comité de sélection de l’ACQS pour le colloque.
Les participants seront retenus sur la base d’un résumé de plus ou moins 250 mots transmis à l’ACQS. Cliquez sur „Emerging Scholars Colloquium“ dans la section « sujet »
https://app.oxfordabstracts.com/stages/3141/submitter


Katharine Harrington, Présidente, ACQS
Chantal Houdet, Directrice générale, AIEQ
Frédéric Rondeau, organisateur du Colloque des jeunes chercheurs

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Aktuelles Call for Papers

CFP Solidarités. Réseaux – Convivialités – Confrontations / Solidarities. Networks – Convivialities – Confrontations

44th Annual Conference of the Association for Canadian Studies in German-speaking Countries (GKS)

March 3-5, 2023, in Grainau, Germany

Deadline: May 15, 2022 Deadline extended to June 5, 2022!

With the theme „Solidarities. Networks – Convivialities – Confrontations“, the annual conference of the Association for Canadian Studies in German-speaking Countries (GKS) will be devoted to the forms and practices of solidarity in Canada and Quebec. It will examine not only the networks and forms of cohabitation that result from them, but also the inherent potential for conflict. The chosen perspective is interdisciplinary, from the angle of Francophone and Anglophone cultural, literary, and linguistic studies, historical sciences, political sciences and sociology, geography and economics, anthropology, and Indigenous studies, as well as women’s and gender studies.

Since the 1980s, following the acceleration of globalization and the establishment of the (neo)liberal paradigm, the question of solidarity no longer seemed to have a place on the political and social scene. However, in societies marked by interculturality and diversity, such as those of Canada and Quebec, this question has remained very relevant in the practices of cohabitation of different groups. It also arises in international solidarity networks, for example in the context of anti-/alter-globalization, ecological, LGBTQIA+, or anti-racist movements. Moreover, the COVID-19 crisis has also led to the emergence or updating in Canada and Quebec of discourses on intergenerational and interprofessional forms of solidarity and on solidarity mobilizations. However, the crisis has also shown their limits and the potential conflicts between the different social discourses related to them. Therefore, the theme of solidarities regarding the networks, confrontations, and forms of conviviality that it implies will be explored along three axes: solidarity and society, solidarity and space, and solidarity and artistic and cultural expressions.

Solidarity and society

This axis explores the political, social, economic, and historical dimensions of solidarity. At the societal level, solidarity can be seen primarily as a political concept aimed at organizing living together, but also as an ideological and controversial discourse; for example, when the originally left-leaning term „national solidarity“ is mobilized within the context of identity politics. In Canada, the concept of „national solidarity community“ is particularly complex and often conflicting. In addition to Canada, Quebec has also considered itself a „nation“ since the 19th century, and alongside it, the various First Nations have emerged in recent decades as new political actors with growing political claims.

From a political and historical perspective, the theme of solidarity continues to raise the question of the international role of Canada and Quebec, as well as the conceptions and objectives associated with it. Thus, the official image of Canada as a key soft power actor is opposed by critical voices, especially within Canadian society.

Thus, the following themes could be addressed, among others:

  • The role of Canada and Quebec in international networks
  • Discourses on international solidarity and their questioning
  • Forms of solidarity communities and the identity constructions linked to them
  • Practices of conviviality and solidarity as well as potential conflicts within and between different types of communities, e.g. migrants, women, First Nations, queer solidarities, disabled people
  • Forms of solidarity within and with First Nations
  • Protest movements and their national and international networking
  • Interactions or confrontations between social partners
  • The role of moments of crisis (e.g. Covid19) in the development of solidarities or confrontations (e.g. the truckers‘ demonstrations in Ottawa in January/February 2022)
  • Corporate social responsibility and sustainability in business contexts
  • Alternative models, life projects and practices of solidarity, for example in the sharing economy or in forms of urban and rural solidarities

Solidarity and space

Solidarities – and conflicts – take place and shape in a variety of spatial settings, and space is a factor in configuring either in specific forms. Urban settings in particular provide ample examples of special communities forming, of conflicts emerging, of needs and demands for solidarity being clearly voiced. Where poverty and exclusion, ethnic or racial discrimination become starkly visible, a variety of state as well as private actors and institutions become active, communities as well as intra- and inter-communal solidarities may emerge and evolve. In other spatial settings of dispersal and diaspora, different forms and processes of solidarity will get established – or not.

The following topics could thus be developed, also from a historical perspective:

  • Forms of conflict and solidarity in Canadian cities
  • Ethnic/linguistic/religious minorities in different spatial settings in Canada: forms of organization, identity-building, solidarities
  • Solidarity with the world beyond Canada
  • The impact of local / regional environments and settings on forms of solidarity, cooperation and cohabitation within and between different communities (e.g. the Arctic / Grand North, the Prairies, the coasts…)
  • Conviviality and convivialism, but also confrontations and tensions between humans and nature as well as human and non-human life forms

Solidarity and language/literature/media

Language, literature, and other media are important for the representation of different forms of solidarity. These range from the representation of national and regional conceptions of identity, to the representation of protest and resistance movements, to the fictionalization of transnational cultural spaces such as francophonie and americanité.

Possible contributions in this framework include, among others:

  • Literary and media representations (traditional and social media) of (practices of) solidarity and its/their negotiation
  • Historical and current representations of regional and cultural-linguistic forms of solidarity, for example in the context of the „Acadian Reunion“ or militant First Nations protest movements since the 1980s
  • The literature of care, which raises the question of responsibility towards the Other and intergenerational solidarity
  • The linguistic situation in Canada from a perspective of confrontation and/or solidarity: English or French as a lingua franca and the related forms of inclusion and exclusion/ vehicularity/vernacularity of the languages of migration
  • Networks of solidarity between different linguistic communities and their literatures

Contact and Abstract Submission

Paper proposals/abstracts of max. 500 words can be submitted in French or English and should outline:

  • methodology and theoretical approaches chosen
  • content/body of research
  • which of the three main axes outlined above the paper speaks to (if any)

In addition, some short biographical information (max. 250 words) should be provided, specifying current institutional affiliation and position as well as research background with regard to the conference topic and/or three main axes.

Abstracts should be submitted no later than June 5, 2022 to the GKS office: gks@kanada-studien.de

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Aktuelles Call for Papers

CFP: Polar (In)Securities: The Future of Global Affairs in the Circumpolar North

Deadline: March 25, 2022

https://www.thearcticinstitute.org/polar-insecurities-future-global-affairs-circumpolar-north/

The Arctic Institute (TAI) proudly celebrated its 10th anniversary in 2021. Our mission is to help inform Arctic policy in the context of the climate crisis, and we believe that circumpolar decision-making must be based on interdisciplinary, inclusive research. As we begin our second decade, we see an opportunity to broaden our mission, and proudly announce our first conference with traditional paper presentations, scenario workshops, and special sessions.

The climate crisis destabilizes traditional understandings of security in the Arctic. Many conferences and scholars have produced invaluable scholarship that seeks to understand how climate change affects security, regional development, and social and Indigenous welfare in the Arctic. We choose to upend the narrative by reframing our central question. How will global developments affect the circumpolar north? We offer graduate students and early career scholars a call for papers to address this question by applying different forms of security studies on global issues that affect the circumpolar north.

  • Cultural Security
  • Economic Security
  • Energy Security
  • Environmental Security
  • Food Security
  • Health Security
  • Military Security
  • Political Security