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Call for Papers

Theme: In the Balance
Subtitle: Indigeneity, Performance, Globalization
Type: International Conference
Institution: Royal Holloway, University of London 
Location: London (United Kingdom)
Date: 24.–27.10.2013
Deadline: 30.4.2013

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If indigeneity and globalization are seen to articulate (with) each
other in cultural as well as political spheres, what hangs in the
balance? Working through the analytical window of performance in a
range of sites and modalities, this interdisciplinary conference
examines the power and the precariousness of indigeneity as a
politicized cultural force in our unevenly connected world. The
growing visibility of artistic networks and ideological coalitions
among indigenous peoples on a transnational scale urges a fresh look
at the mechanisms of cultural entanglement and the particular rights
and insights afforded by indigeneity in that process. Cast as an
ethical touchstone in some arenas and a thorny complication in
others, indigeneity now matters in global debates about natural
resources, heritage, governance, representation and social justice,
to name just some of the contentious issues that continue to stall
the unfinished business of decolonization. Indigenous arts,
simultaneously attuned to local voices and global cultural flows,
have often been the vanguard in communicating what is at stake in
such debates, to international as well as grass-­roots audiences. At
the same time, the global circulation of indigenous arts as cultural
capital has affected the ways in which indigeneity is activated and
understood across different social and aesthetic platforms. Our
explicit focus on performance is designed to probe the specificities
of these related movements at the level of embodied praxis. It should
also prompt questions about the interactions, contradictions,
disjunctions, opportunities, exclusions, injustices and aspirations
that globalization entails.

The conference will be held in central London in conjunction with two
international events: the Origins Festival of First Nations and a
performance-­based exhibition, Ecocentrix: Indigenous Arts,
Sustainable Acts. An extensive film programme is also included.
Expected participants in these events include Marrugeku, Peter Morin,
Marie Clements, Rosanna Raymond, Fiona Foley, Charles Te Ahukaramū
Royal, and Coordinadora Latinoamericana de Cine y Comunicación de los
Pueblos Indígenas.

Proposals might bring indigeneity, performance and globalization into
dialogue in reference to any of the topics listed below:

- indigenous diasporas or cosmopolitanisms 
- (inter)cultural contact zones 
- sovereignty, cultural diplomacy, citizenship 
- protests and activism 
- advocacy, collaboration, networks 
- democracy and the public sphere
- mobility, locality and geopolitics
- digital performance, hybrid arts praxis
- local/global platforms
- branding, tourism, touring circuits
- belonging, affect and the senses
- mega-­events and spectacle
- languages, epistemologies
- resources, ecologies, environments
- margins and mainstreams
- reconciliation/reparation movements
- heritage, transmission, repatriation
- curating and mediating events

Presentations are invited from, but not limited to, the disciplines
of indigenous studies, film, dance, theatre, music, postcolonial
studies, anthropology, cultural studies, politics, geography,
history, sociology, and philosophy. We are especially interested in
contributions that explore the participatory, phenomenological
thickness of performance as a means of communication and the material
processes involved in its making. While the focus is on indigenous
cultures in or from the Americas, Australia, the Pacific and South
Africa, outstanding proposals on topics outside this scope will be
considered. Performative presentations are welcome.

Send 250-­word abstracts for 20-­minute presentations and a short
biography to Helen Gilbert and Dani Phillipson at
<dani.phillip...@rhul.ac.uk> by 30 April 2013. The main language of
the conference is English though we welcome proposals in other
languages and will facilitate translation for those wanting to speak
in Spanish, French or Portuguese.

Keynote Speakers:
Faye Ginsburg, Michael Greyeyes, Tracy Devine Guzmán and Margaret
Werry

This event is funded by the European Research Council project,
'Indigeneity in the Contemporary', led by Professor Helen Gilbert,
Royal Holloway, University of London.

Conference website:
http://www.indigeneity.net




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