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CfP: The 16th Jerusalem Conference in Canadian Studies „Globalization and Innovation: Canada and Israel in Comparative Perspective“

The Halbert Centre for Canadian Studies, Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Israel Association for Canadian Studies, 20-22 May 2019 in Jerusalem, Israel

Innovation is considered nowadays as a necessary foundation for the vitality of organizations and nations, directly impacting their growth and prosperity. Whereas once natural-, financial-, and human capital were considered critical for robustness, today the focus is on innovativeness, namely the capacity for creativity and implementation of novel ideas and practices. Therefore, seeing that innovativeness is regarded as critical for any society, community, region, firm, or organization that face fast changing conditions or fierce competition, innovation rose to be the central component for policy-making and strategic planning worldwide. Moreover, nations and organizations compete not only for better outcomes of innovation, such as higher rates of innovation-based fortunes, but also for better reputation as innovators. How has this global “innovation imperative” impact the global integration and the development of nations, regions, and firms? How is Canada positioned in the increasingly dense and global web of innovation-based ventures and projects? And, how has the reputation of Israel as “start-up nation” reflect on Canada’s innovation policy and on the innovation strategy of Canadian firms and organizations? Putting Canada and Canadian affairs in the context of the phenomenal rates of worldwide expansion of innovation, the 16th Jerusalem Conference in Canadian Studies shall be devoted to debating the social role of innovation in delivering progress and justice to people and societies worldwide, also through comparing among different nations, different sectors, and different historic eras.

The Halbert Centre for Canadian Studies at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Israel Association for Canadian Studies are convening a three-day conference at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem to steer discussions that situate Canada and Canadian affairs within the context of globalization and innovation.

See the full Call for Papers here.

Deadline for proposals: October 1, 2018.

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CfP: 1968 IN THE AMERICAS – INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE – UNIVERSITY OF POITIERS, OCTOBER 15-17TH 2018

International Colloquium – Poitiers University (France), October 15-17 2018
Fifty years have gone by since the protest movements of May and June 1968 in France took place, combining an array of crises (a crisis of the condition of students, a broader social and political crisis) and struggles into a “revolution” which left its mark due to some of its unique features as well as its international potential. Half a century later, however, we propose to reconsider the significance of this period’s movement(s) by de-centering the approach, looking specifically at its trans-American and Caribbean dimensions.

From the perspective of France, the abundant literature which has analyzed these movements tends to place them either as the center of a European wave of “protest” and, depending on the point of view, as a source of disorder or, rather, for progressives notably, as a movement limited to anti-authoritarian aspirations. However one notices that the prevailing interpretations seek to rob this symbolic and crucial year, within the second half of the 20th century, of its very essence, that is its anti-systemic character, either on a social level – the role of labor – or on a geopolitical one. Indeed these movements cannot be limited to the barricades of the rue Gay Lussac or the Boulevard St Michel on the night of May 10-11 or even reduced to student or generational protest activism. In France, the events of May-June 1968 represent the largest strike in the history of the Western labor movement, and as the “68 moment” crossed national and continental boundaries, it seemed to circumvent a world borne out of World War Two and the subsequent division of the planet into two blocs.

Starting with the Tet offensive (the Vietnamese New Year), 1968 represents a moment that rings through the world in all directions, East and West, North and South, from the Berkeley campus to the streets of Prague, from the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota to Santiago, Chile. Symbolically, the expression ’68‘ marks the beginning of a cycle of social and political protests that questioned both the “affluent society” varieties of capitalism in the postwar West, and the actually existing socialism.

In this way, the Americas and the Caribbean found themselves involved in – and connected by – the stakes raised by the 1968 movement. From this perspective, the years of revolt only came to an end with the “conservative counter-revolution” that started in September 1973 in Chile, and ultimately triumphed in January 1981 with the start of Ronald Reagan’s presidency, and the US military operation “Urgent Fury” launched against Thomas Bishop in Grenada.

In the United States, the year 1968 came out of what some have called “the long Sixties,” while in Latin America it inaugurated what would come to be called “los setenta.” In 1968 the US was shaken with unprecedented intensity by the multiplication of resistance fronts (the black liberation movement, free speech, women’s rights, mass opposition to the Vietnam war, etc). In Canada, the foundation of the PQ in October 1968 suggested a novel approach to regional politics & appeared to be a response to the consolidation of the FLQ, whose spectacular actions were not so different from the MLN-Tupamaros in Uruguay.

Latin America and the Caribbean – seen as the “backyard” of the US – and of Europe, in parts – underwent shockwaves which were uneven yet equally intense as those shaking North America, including the first massive anti-dictatorship demonstrations in Brazil in March or, in the English-speaking Caribbean area, the Rodney riots (in Kingston, Jamaica), targeting Hugh Shearer’s government, in October.

In South America, 1968 appeared to last longer than a year. Yet it was marked by similar attempts to redefine the traditional left and by interrogations about the “new left” at a time when the Cuban revolution – confronted with the assassination of Guevara in October 1967, with the failure of its non-urban guerrilla attempts and its position regarding the Prague Spring – attempted to change its continental and extra-continental strategies.

The Nicaraguan FSLN, in this regard, is a good example of the strategic reassessments which would characterize the next decade. In the Southern Cone countries, a shift in relations between rural struggles, urban and working class movements, and newer networks of young activists, was quite noticeable. On an institutional level, in Peru, General Velasco Alvarado took over as the head of a “revolutionary government” which would help shape the political horizon of the next decade.

Yet from a trans-American perspective, the culmination point of the year occurred in Mexico City, in the span of the few days between, on the one hand, the Tlatelolco massacre, and on the other, as an echo, the raised fists of Tommie Smith and John Carlos, which changed the meaning of the Olympic games taking place in the Mexican capital and connected the movements of different parts of North America. In the context of often contradictory commemorative interpretations of the year 1968, 2018 can be seen as an opportunity to look at the state of the art about this time period. This colloquium thus intends to retrace connections among multiple configurations, social, political, theoretical and artistic, which characterized the wave of “1968” in the Americas. Our approach is resolutely comparative, trans-American and interdisciplinary.

The international colloquium “1968 in the Americas and the Caribbean” is designed to focus especially on the year 1968 and on its effects, across the Caribbean as well as all parts of the Americas (Northern, Central and Southern). We seek to pay special attention to pluri-disciplinary approaches and would like to connect territorial and cultural considerations so as to emphasize transversality, modes of tangible exchanges, cultural and political transfers, as well as parallels which this crucial year suggests and embodies.

Individual or group proposals can be made to address themes including (but not limited to) those listed below. We propose to think of 1968 through several lenses: literature, the arts (film, photography, music), archives and manuscripts, history, political science, and sociology. The colloquium is open to computer-aided trans-disciplinary approaches in the spirit of the “digital humanities.”

Here is a list of tentative topics or themes. Presentations may be given in French, English, Spanish or Portuguese.

A- Internationalisms

*International solidarities

*Ruptures and discordances

* How « May » echoes elsewhere : the « French May » in the Americas, the Latin-American “May” in Europe

B- Protests and Rights

* Afro-Americanisms

* Trans-American feminism(s)?

* Indigenous rights and independence movements

* Early environmental movements

C- Embodiments of revolt

* Student movements worldwide

* Youth and counterculture

* Revolution in – and on – bodies

D- Revolution and Backlash

* Counter-revolution and the doctrine of national security

* Radicalisms, and the state’s containing influence

* Emeutes, riots, revueltas, guerrillas and armed struggle : violence and modalities of confrontation

* Religion, churches and revolutions in the Americas and the Caribbean

* The New Left and 1968

E- Forms of Labor Insubordination

*In Factories : Revolution on the job/assembly line

*Unionism and 1968

* Workers, masses, and the new incarnations of the proletariat

Propositions and summaries can be sent until June 15 2018. Online registration at https://colloque1968.sciencesconf.org/resource/page/id/2. To do so open an account on the following website: sciencesconf.org. If you encounter a problem or have further questions, please contact the organizers at: colloque1968@sciencesconf.org

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CfP 40th annual conference – Deadline extended

The submission deadline of the Call for Papers for the 40th annual conference of the Association for Canadian Studies in German-Speaking Countries, February 14 to 17, 2019 in Grainau, Germany has been extended. We cordially invite you to submit your abstracts on the topic of „Intersectionality: Theories, Policies, Practices“ until June 19, 2018 to gks@kanada-studien.de. We will apply for third party funding in order to cover our international guest speaker’s travel and accommodation costs, so please share the call with the extended deadline widely in your international networks.

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Die Deadline unseres Call for Papers für die 40. GKS-Jahrestagung vom 14. bis 17. Februar 2019 in Grainau wurde verlängert. Wir laden Sie deshalb herzlich ein, Abstracts für Beträge zum Thema „Intersektionalität: Theorien, Strategien, Praktiken“ / “Intersectionality: Theories, Policies, Practices” / « Intersectionalité : théories, politiques, pratiques » noch bis zum 19. Juni an gks@kanada-studien.de zu senden. Wir bewerben uns um DFG-Förderung für Reise- und Unterkunftskosten unserer internationalen Referent*innen. Bitte leiten Sie die Ausschreibung also auch an Ihre internationalen Netzwerke und Kolleg*innen weiter und schlagen Sie ihnen vor, sich zu bewerben.

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Nous vous informons que le délai de notre appel à communications pour la 40ème Conférence annuelle de l’Association d’Études Canadiennes dans les Pays de Langue Allemande prévu pour du 14 au 17 février 2019 à Grainau a été prolongé jusqu’au 19 juin. Nous vous invitons donc cordialement à envoyer vos résumés sur le thème Intersectionalité : théories, politiques, pratiques à l’adresse électronique suivante: gks@kanada-studien.de. Les frais de déplacement et d’hébergement des conférencier(e)s invité(e)s internationaux seront couverts par des tiers auprès desquelles nous effectuerons une demande de financement. Veuillez s’il vous plait partager l’appel à communication sur vos réseaux internationaux avec le nouveau délai.

Download the Call for Papers in English here and in French here.

 

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Appel de textes: Revue Fémur « Le travail dans la littérature québécoise contemporaine »

« Le travail, c’est bien une maladie, puisqu’il y a une médecine du travail », disait Coluche en 1995. Au-delà de l’humour, la citation révèle une conception négative du travail et affirme l’exact opposé de l’adage populaire « le travail, c’est la santé ». En effet, avec l’industrialisation d’abord, puis avec l’essor du néolibéralisme et la précarisation récente de l’emploi, le travail est plus souvent perçu comme une source de souffrance qu’un vecteur de bien-être. Au tournant des années 1980 en France, Dominique Viart parle d’un réveil de la littérature du travail (2011) qui « accuse autant qu’[elle] met en forme une idée de perte généralisée, dont l’aboutissement est la précarité grandissante – du travail et de l’expérience humaine qu’il génère » (David, p. i). Alors que le constat est sensiblement le même de l’autre côté de l’Atlantique, il est très peu question de « la job » dans la critique littéraire québécoise. C’est à cette question de la représentation (ou de l’absence de représentations) du travail dans le théâtre, la poésie, la bande dessinée, l’essai et le roman québécois que le premier numéro de FÉMUR sera consacré.

De Jean Rivard le défricheur aux Pensées pour jours ouvrables de Bureau Beige (2017) en passant par Le cassé (1964), Môman travaille pas, a trop d’ouvrage (1976) et les nombreux romans historiques qui prennent pour décor un Québec ouvrier du siècle passé, le travail prend plusieurs formes et occupent différentes fonctions (narratives, identitaires, idéologiques, critiques) qui ont surtout été étudiées sous l’angle de la sociocritique et de la sociologie. Central à certaines conceptions féministes (Toupin, 2014) et marxistes de la société, le travail (et son envers le chômage, par exemple) conserve en effet, dans les œuvres et dans la critique littéraire québécoise, une profondeur historique qui en fait un objet politique ou à tout le moins, un objet qui problématise les liens entre littérature et politique. À ce titre, le joual, qui domine les représentations des milieux populaires à Parti pris notamment, illustre bien cette jonction entre projet littéraire et projet politique (marxisant), à l’horizon d’une poétique du travail spécifique. Des décennies plus tard, des questions similaires, à propos de l’engagement de l’oeuvre et de l’écrivain, de l’oralité et de la fonction critique de la littérature, se posent à la lecture de l’oeuvre romanesque et poétique d’Érika Soucy (Les murailles, L’épiphanie dans le front), des Confessions d’un cassé (2015) ou des Contes du travail alimentaire (2011), mais aussi d’un texte comme Retraite de Renaud Jean (2014), qui opère une critique de la doxa économique par l’entremise du motif de l’ennui et de la retraite.

Suivant en cela les changements économiques qui amènent de nouvelles « normes » et « formes » de travail, un grand nombre de Québécois⋅es se trouvent dans l’obligation d’occuper des emplois atypiques (pigiste, travail « par projets », contrats, temps partiel, intérim, stages, travail « au noir », à domicile, de nuit, etc.). Quelle place les œuvres québécoises contemporaines réservent-elles à ces travailleurs⋅euses précaires ? Quel portrait les textes dressent-ils de la main d’oeuvre issue des régions plus éloignées, dont les possibilités d’avenir sont dictées par les réalités propres au territoire habité ? Et qu’en est-il des femmes qui, malgré leur « présence accrue sur le marché du travail depuis le dernier siècle », assument toujours « les deux tiers des corvées domestiques » (Hamrouni, p. 2) ? Entendu comme l’ensemble des activités et des soins prodigués pour assurer le maintien du bien-être d’une personne, le care rendu par les femmes fait-il l’objet de représentations dans la littérature québécoise ? S’apparente-t-il à une forme de travail ou est-il plutôt décrit en termes de choix personnel, voire de vocation propre à la gent féminine ?

Sur les plans esthétiques et poétiques, les littératures du travail soulèvent également plusieurs interrogations. Perçu comme routinier, le quotidien des travailleurs⋅es laisse parfois difficilement place à l’événement et appelle une langue répétitive ou technocratique. Comment les oeuvres s’accommodent-elles de cette monotonie ou, au contraire, de la contrainte de la productivité tous azimuts ? Existe-t-il, au sein de certains projets littéraires, « un caractère expérimental [qui s’efforce de traduire] la “novlangue néolibérale” (Krzywkowski, p. 73) » ? Conjointement à la question de l’écriture se pose celle du rapport à la réalité : certains genres sont-ils privilégiés pour relater l’expérience du travail (romans historiques, formes hybrides, formes dramatiques, fictions documentaires, biographies, récits, témoignages, etc.) ? Quelle valeur l’institution leur accorde-t-elle ; y a-t-il un « coût symbolique » élevé aux représentations du travail ? Enfin, au-delà du projet de représentation, les littératures du travail comportent-elles d’autres visées ? Quelle conception de la littérature et de ses « pouvoirs » mettent-elles en jeu ?

http://www.crilcq.org/actualites/item/appel-de-textes-revue-femur/

Date de tombée : 30 mai 2018.

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CfArticles: Rescaling CanLit: Global Readings – Deadline extended

Guest editor: Eva Darias-Beautell, University of La Laguna, Spain

Although there has been an extension on the submission, the deadline to the CFP “Rescaling CanLit: Global Readings” for the special issue of Canadian Literature is coming up soon (Friday, June 1, 2018).

It is now commonly accepted that Canadian literature has become a global literature, implying that any understanding of textual localities is traversed by vectors that exceed, complicate and extend the nation in physical, historical, and cultural ways. But the gaze is seldom reversed and little attention has been paid to the role of international scholarship in the current transformation and development of the field.

How are Canadian texts read and circulated beyond the national borders? What is the place of Canadian literature in the institutional spaces of universities outside Canada? How do those transnational contexts negotiate the relationship between texts and readers? Are there defining differences in the ways non-Canadian scholars approach CanLit? How does transnational scholarship influence, challenge, enrich and rescale Canadian literary production?

This special issue invites scholars of Canadian literature from around the globe to engage critically with any aspect of Canadian literary production, dissemination, or reception. Essays should implicitly bring to view the two-way direction of reading and writing Canadian literature globally, demonstrating the porosity of transnational scholarship as well as advancing innovative perspectives that may contribute to the rescaling of the field.

Extended deadline for submissions: June 1, 2018.