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Call for Papers

Theme: Landbody
Subtitle: Indigeneity's Radical Commitments
Type: Center for 21st Century Studies Conference
Institution: Center for 21st Century Studies, University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Location: Milwaukee, WI (USA)
Date: 5.–7.5.2016
Deadline: 15.1.2016

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The C21 conference landbody considers the implications of Native
ontologies and epistemologies, emphasizing the animate, living nature
of place and the conceptual primacy of connection and locale. Despite
colonial incursions, Native communities continue tribal lifeways,
constructing and reconstructing systems of reciprocal survival in
regions and localized spaces throughout lands and other spaces
occupied by and contested by colonial powers and people. Place is not
a neutral backdrop. An ontological connection to a specific land
comprises a central component of indigenous being, a commitment to
place contrary to current celebrations of migration, individualism,
and cosmopolitanism.

Two sets of questions animate this conference. First, what are the
implications of these connections to the lives and practices of
indigenous peoples? What are the effects of the dispossession of
land, or of the concurrent settlement and control of that land by a
foreign force? How does holding onto land, or fighting to retain
legal claims to it, retain collective identity? How does the land
communicate with the people who inhabit it, and vice versa?

Second, how do American Indian and other indigenous philosophies and
lifeworlds affect, transform, and undermine the categories of the
settler colonialists, such as the global capitalist presumptions of
constant corporate growth and change? What echoes and ignorances
underpin contemporary academic assumptions about thought and place?
What are the pernicious effects and implications of the racial and
settler colonial assumptions of time, space, and civilization, and
how might they be resisted? What does recognizing that land is a
people, animals are peoples, and the vitality of relationships
between all forms of the living and non-living entail? What must
theory learn from autochthony and indigeneity? Is asking such
questions more about mutual respect and understanding or are they
merely indirect appeals to self-satisfied settler colonial pretenses
of atonement (or even an attempt to use indigenous thought to
continue such colonialism)?

We seek proposals for critical, conceptual, and historical papers or
creative presentations that address the questions above. Topics for
proposals might include, but are not limited to:

- collective memory, diaspora, and being “out of place”
- gendering locations and memories
- refusal, resistance, and rebellion
- fallacies of human/animal and culture/nature distinctions
- environmentalism and lived identity
- linguistic dwelling
- claims of justice, nationhood, and sovereignty
- speculative fictions of Nations and place
- ruins, ruination, and touristic economies
- distributions and circulations of knowledge
- animism and theology
- violences to land as violences to peoples
- foreign substances and survivance
- queering land
- repatriation and redemption
- pluralizing temporalities and “development”
- generations: reproduction and renewal alongside settler colonialism

Plenary speakers

Jennifer Nez Denetdale
Jolene Rickard
Audra Simpson
Kim TallBear
Gerald Vizenor

Please send your abstract (up to 250 words) and a brief (1-page) CV
by Friday, January 15, 2016 to Kennan Ferguson at: c...@uwm.edu


Contact:

Kennan Ferguson, Director
Center for 21st Century Studies
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
P.O. Box 413
Milwaukee, WI 53201
USA
E-mail: c...@uwm.edu
Web: http://www.c21uwm.com/landbody/




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