__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Diasporas
Subtitle: Exploring Critical Issues
Type: 6th Global Conference
Institution: Inter-Disciplinary.Net
   Mansfield College, University of Oxford
Location: Oxford (United Kingdom)
Date: 6.–8.7.2013
Deadline: 8.2.2013

__________________________________________________


This inter- and multi-disciplinary project seeks to explore the
contemporary experience of Diasporas – communities who conceive of
themselves as a national, ethnic, linguistic or other form of
cultural and political construction of collective membership living
outside of their ‘home lands.’ Diaspora is a concept which is far
from being definitional. Despite problems and limitations in
terminology, this notion may be defined with issues attached to it
for a more complete understanding. Such a term which may have its
roots in Greek, is used customarily to apply to a historical
phenomenon that has now passed to a period that usually supposes that
diasporans are those who are settled forever in a country other than
the one in which they were born and thus this term loses its
dimension of irreversibility and of exile.

In order to increase our understanding of Diasporas and their impact
on both the receiving countries and their respective homes left
behind, key issues will be addressed related to Diaspora cultural
expression and interests. In addition, the conference will address
the questions: Do Diasporas continue to exist? How do they evolve?
What is the footprint or limit of Diaspora? Is the global economy,
media and policies sending different messages about diaspora to
future generations?

Presentations, papers, performances, workshops, presentations and
pre-formed panels are invited on any of the following themes:

Queering Diaspora
Diasporic identities and practices invariably position
heterosexuality as central to the past (the imagined homeland) and
the future survival of the diasporic community through implicit and
explicit norms, traditions, and expectations. How do members of
diasporic communities who identify with subordinated forms of
sexuality such as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgendered or other
queer identities negotiate hetero-normativity in their communities?
Do questions of diasporic cultural and social survival heighten
homophobia? Or conversely, are diasporic spaces more easily queered?
We welcome papers that address how LGBTQ members negotiate sexuality
and diasporic identities, and consider the implications for
intersectional theories of diaspora.

Diaspora, Sex, and Gender
If heteronormativity can shape diasporic identities, so too can
historical norms of patriarchal power and the practices and social
infrastructure associated with them. How, for instance, are diasporas
and diasporic communities complicit in the general social practices
that buttress inequalities or abuses? Do differences between sexes
produce different perspectives on what constitutes diasporic
identity? Does this disparity result in the co-existence of competing
diasporic identities or ‘imaginaries’ that are tied to sex and gender
identity? Or, on the other hand, does diaspora offer opportunities
for change or for alternate social performances of sex and gender to
arise? Does the distance between the home/land left behind and the
new home offer an opportunity to break with the past and with
tradition? To what extent can we speak of ‘gendered’ diasporas?

Visible Diasporas
Cinema, television, youtube and other mass media, and the visual arts
are instrumental in representing diaspora or making diaspora visible
both to itself and to others beyond the diasporic community. In then
case of cinema, the presence and impact of displaced / globalised
populations of audiences, spectators and producers of new
mainstream /Hollywood /Bollywood cinema are crucial to the emergence
of this post-diasporic cinema, as these narratives from texts to
screen constitute a fundamental challenge for the negotiation of
complex diasporic issues. How does the visual language of these
various media shape or define diaspora? Those presenting on this
topic and whose papers focus on cinema and other visual
narratives/media are encouraged to show short excerpts or clips from
their primary texts or to provide handouts rather than simply to
describe the visual media. Long, descriptive summaries of film, for
instance, are discouraged.

Invisible Diasporas
While there are multiple ways in which diaspora is made visible, what
are the ways in which diasporas are made invisible? How do diasporas
escape the attention of, or are actively made invisible by, the
global media the collective institutional consciousness of such
bodies as state governments and organisations such as the United
Nations, etc.? Are these diasporas invisible because of their
relatively small size or because they exist within other diasporas or
in the shadow of other, larger visible diasporas? Is their
invisibilty the result of a lack of awareness or documentation?
Ignorance and apathy? Or are they forced into silence and
invisibility due to the exigencies of power? That is to say, is their
visibility actively repressed? Or do these diasporas engage in making
themselves strategically invisible as a kind of self-defensive
cloaking or masking mechanism necessary to survival? Do
discrimination, assimilationist ideology or other forces ensure that
this takes place either actively or passively over the course of time?

e-Diasporas and Technology
Technology has changed the way we think about diaspora. The internet,
youtube, email, skype, social media, etc. have produced what has
become known as the virtual diaspora and has had a profound effect on
the way that diasporic communities interact with ‘home/land’ and each
other. When communication can take place in such an immediate way,
distances are shrunk and the boundaries between ‘here’ and ‘there’
are problematised or made more porous if not actually erased. Such
connectivity only intensifies the interstitiality or cross-border
mobility of diasporans who are able to engage virtually in more than
one social environment. In a discussion of so-called e-diasporas,
questions of access, mobility, connectivity ultimately lead to
questions of privilege. Who is able to connect and who is not? And
how does technology and the connections it provides allow the
diaspora to reshape ‘home’ from a distance and vice versa?

The Limits of Diaspora — Problematising ‘Diaspora’
What are the ‘limits’ of diaspora? What is its ‘footprint’? What are
the inter-generational issues that cause diasporas to evolve over
time, to move toward or away from assimilation in then mainstream
culture of the present home? How and why do diasporas redefine
themselves? In what ways does ‘diaporic identity’ perform a
gate-keeping function that includes but also excludes? How are
diasporic identities contested? What are some of the ways to identity
and define the subject in changing political boundaries where
cultural interactions are amplified? What are the processes of social
formation and reformation of diasporas in an age of increasing
globalisation? What are the circumstances that give diasporas a
window of opportunity to redefine their social position in both the
place of origin and the current place of residence? How do we
‘problematise’ or critique diaspora?

The Evolution of the Critical Language of Diaspora
This topic is related to the previous one but focuses more
specifically on the discipline of diaspora studies itself. What new
cross-’ethnoscapes’ and cross-’ideoscapes’ are emerging and what new
methods can be used to theorise the web of forces that influences
Diasporas? Rogers Brubaker posits the current phenomenon of a
diaspora ‘diaspora’ or an increasing dispersal of the concept and the
ways that diaspora is represented, understood, and theorised.
Stéphane Dufoix discusses the need to “go beyond ‘diaspora’ in the
same way that Rogers Brubaker and Frederick Cooper have shown it is
useful to go beyond ‘identity’” (Diaspora. Berkeley: U of California
P, 2008. 108). What is the current state of diaspora studies and what
is the trajectory of its evolution? How does globalisation affect the
ways in which we understand diaspora? In what ways are the realities
of contemporary diasporas posing challenges to the critical language
of the discipline? What’s next?

The Steering Group particularly welcomes the submission of pre-formed
panel proposals. Papers will also be considered on any related theme.

What to Send:
300 word abstracts should be submitted by Friday 8th February 2013.
If an abstract is accepted for the conference, a full draft paper
should be submitted by Friday 10th May 2013. Abstracts should be
submitted simultaneously to both Organising Chairs; abstracts may be
in Word, WordPerfect, or RTF formats with the following information
and in this order:

a) author(s), b) affiliation, c) email address, d) title of abstract,
e) body of abstract, f) up to 10 keywords.
E-mails should be entitled: DIAS6 Abstract Submission.

Please use plain text (Times Roman 12) and abstain from using
footnotes and any special formatting, characters or emphasis (such as
bold, italics or underline). Please note that a Book of Abstracts is
planned for the end of the year. We acknowledge receipt and answer to
all paper proposals submitted. If you do not receive a reply from us
in a week you should assume we did not receive your proposal; it
might be lost in cyberspace! We suggest, then, to look for an
alternative electronic route or resend.

Please note: Inter-Disciplinary.Net is a not-for-profit network and
we are not in a position to be able to assist with conference travel
or subsistence.

The conference is part of the ‘Diversity and Recognition’ series of
research projects, which in turn belong to the At the Interface
programmes of ID.Net. It aims to bring together people from different
areas and interests to share ideas and explore various discussions
which are innovative and challenging. All papers accepted for and
presented at the conference will be published in an ISBN eBook.
Selected papers may be invited to go forward for development into
20-25 page chapters for publication in a themed dialogic ISBN hard
copy volume.

Organising Chairs:
Ram Vemuri & Rob Fisher: di...@inter-disciplinary.net
Jonathan Rollins: jroll...@arts.ryerson.ca

For further details of the conference, please visit:
http://www.inter-disciplinary.net/at-the-interface/diversity-recognition/diasporas/call-for-papers/




__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://cal.polylog.org

__________________________________________________

 

Reply via email to