Looking Forward, 2014: Current Projects in American Studies”
November 13-15, 2014
John F. Kennedy Institute for North American Studies, Freie Universität Berlin

Organized by Frank Kelleter and Alexander Starre (Department of Culture, JFKI)

Conference Website: www.jfki.fu-berlin.de/looking_forward2014

Two important institutions of American Studies in Germany celebrated major anniversaries in 2013: the German Association of American Studies (DGfA) turned sixty and the John F. Kennedy Institute at the Free University of Berlin passed the fifty-year mark. While both events triggered retrospective glances at the history of the field, the conference “Looking Forward, 2014” will survey major research projects of the coming years, mostly (but not exclusively) from Germany’s American Studies community.

In presenting their current projects, scholars will showcase diverse approaches to American culture, literature, and society. The field of American Studies has reached a point where its capacious multi-disciplinarity extends across an unprecedented variety of artifacts, practices, and media. What does it entail, then, to study American culture under such rubrics as cognition, materiality, narrative, or seriality? Which methodologies are fit to explicate the complex media ecologies of the present, as well as the archives of the American past? How do researchers navigate the currents of aesthetics, politics, hermeneutics, and theory? Is the field destined to prolong the rhetoric of “turns” and paradigm shifts or can it replace perennial appeals to do things differently with sustainable ideas for how to do things better?

Presentations will include reports from larger, ongoing or emerging, often interdisciplinary research ventures as well as from forthcoming or recent book publications of younger scholars (especially “Habilitationsschriften”).

Speakers: Klaus Benesch, Laura Bieger, Barbara Buchenau, James Dorson, Rita Felski, Winfried Fluck, Jens Gurr, Udo Hebel, Frank Kelleter, Günter Leypoldt, Martin Lüthe, Ruth Mayer, Mark McGurl, Heike Paul, Robert Reid-Pharr, Christoph Ribbat, Julia Sattler, Peter Schneck, Philipp Schweighauser, Florian Sedlmeier, Sabine Sielke, Daniel Stein, Jan Stievermann, Babette B. Tischleder, Johannes Voelz, Boris Vormann, Simon Wendt

For a detailed schedule, including abstracts of all presentations, see the conference website:

www.jfki.fu-berlin.de/looking_forward2014 

The conference is free and open to the public.

Contact: alexander.starre@fu-berlin.de

 

The European Network for Short Fiction Research will hold its annual conference in Dublin, April 17-18, 2015. This year’s theme is “Reading Short Fiction in Transnational Contexts”, and abstracts are now being accepted at ensfrdublin@gmail.com. 

Much scholarly work has been done in recent years on the idea of transnationalism in 
literary studies, but the extent to which the term relates to works of short fiction has 
not yet received sustained scrutiny. This conference aims to address this scholarly 
lacuna with a series of lectures and panel discussions on a range of issues including 
(but not limited to) the following:
• The transnational origins of short fiction 
• Short fiction between nations 
• Short fiction and nation-building
• Short fiction and the idea of the nation
• Short fiction as transnational form
• Short fiction between national cultures
• Reading short fiction across nations
• Short fiction authors between states
• Short fiction and its international audiences
• Short fiction and issues in translation
• Short fiction and the nation state
• Short fiction and the transatlantic world
• Short fiction in Europe
• Short fiction and empire
• Short fiction and the gendering of nation
In addition to papers on these and other topics, the conference will include a panel 
discussion on the first five years of Best European Fiction, an annual anthology of 
short fiction in English (and translation into English) published by the Dalkey Archive
Press. The conference will also include some readings by contemporary Irish short 
fiction writers.
300-word abstracts for 20-minute papers should be sent to ensfrdublin@gmail.com no 
later than midnight on the 1st of December 2014. Contributors should also send a 
short biographical note indicating institutional affiliation. A provisional conference 
programme will be announced in early January 2015.
It is envisaged that conference proceedings will be published as a special issue of the 
peer-reviewed journal Short Fiction in Theory and Practice:
http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal,id=196/
For further information about the European Network for Short Fiction Research see:
http://ensfr.hypotheses.org/

Download the CFP in PDF here: CfP ENSFR conference April 2015 Dublin

REGISTRATION IS OPEN FOR THE BAAS/APG US POLITICS COLLOQUIUM

         

   US Embassy, London
    The Obama administration: hope, change and partisan politics
    Friday 14 November 2014, 11.00am – 5.00pm
    (registration and coffee 10.30 – 11.00am)
     
Speakers Include:

William Barnard (author and former Chair of Democrats Abroad) and Republican counterpart, Dissecting the 2014 Election Outcomes

Dr Althea Legal-Miller (University College London), Barack Obama and the African American Struggle for Racial Justice 

Professor Inderjeet Parmar (City University) Foreign Policy Challenges for the Obama Administration

Former Members of Congress Hon Mary Bono (R-CA) and Hon Brian Baird (D-WA) discussing current hot-button US political issues
     
APG would like to extend sincere thanks to the US Embassy, London for hosting the event, which will take place from 11.00am – 5.00pm. Lunch will be taken this year at the Embassy’s in-house restaurant. This must be paid for in advance with your colloquium registration. Lunch is just £15. There are other places to eat around the Embassy for those that want to make independent arrangements. The colloquium fee of £10 without lunch includes refreshments.
     
    Please send booking form not later than 1 November 2014 to:
    Dr Clodagh Harrington                                   or email: cmharrington@dmu.ac.uk
    Department of Politics and Public Policy
    Hugh Aston Building
    De Montfort University
    The Gateway
    Leicester LE1 9BH
    —————————————————————————————————–
    Booking Form—Cheques payable to American Politics Group. Or, please email cmharrington@dmu.ac.uk     if you wish to make a BACS payment.
    £10—Colloquium Fee and morning and afternoon refreshments, but without     lunch 
    £25—Colloquium Fee with morning and afternoon refreshments and lunch
    Name: ……………………………………………………………………………
    E-Mail (Please write VERY clearly):………………………………………………
    Institution:……………………………………………………………………….
    Address (of institution, or private address if an independent scholar):
    …………………………………………………………………………
    ……………………………………………………………………………
    Please indicate if you would like a receipt. 

   

 

 

 

 

“American Values: Public Virtues, Private Vices?”
THE 24th BIENNIAL NAAS CONFERENCE ON AMERICAN STUDIES 
University of Oulu, Finland, May 11-13, 2015

 

The conference is organized by the Nordic Association for American Studies (NAAS) and it will offer papers – by approximately 100 speakers from 10 different countries – on how America has defined its central values in politics, history, literature, architecture, film, the media, popular culture, and everyday living. Why does it matter so much to the American public today whether or not Thomas Jefferson had children with Sally Hemings at the end of the eighteenth century? Are there some particular American ways to deal with ethical issues? What has been the impact of such traditional American values as individualism, self-help, and egalitarianism on the rest of the world?

Our guest speakers from the United States will include: ● Annette Gordon-Reed (History Pulitzer for The Hemingses of Monticello, 2009) ● Daniel Walker Howe (History Pulitzer for What Hath God Wrought, 2008) ● Peter Onuf (Author of The Mind of Thomas Jefferson, 2007) ● Andrew O’Shaughnessy (American History Book Prize for Men Who Lost America, 2014) ● Alan Taylor (2 History Pulitzers: for William Cooper’s Town in 1996 and for The Internal Enemy in 2014) ● Gordon Wood (History Pulitzer for The Radicalism of the American Revolution, 1993).

NAAS PLENARY SPEAKERS: ● ASANOR: Hans Skei, author of William Faulkner: The Novelist as a Short Story Writer  ● DAAS: Camelia Elias, author of The Way of The Sign: Cultural Text Theory in Two Steps ● FASA: Bo Pettersson, author of The World According to Kurt Vonnegut: Moral Paradox and Narrative Form ● SAAS: Magnus Ullén, author of The Half-Vanished Structure: Hawthorne’s Allegorical Dialectics.

The conference is open to scholars and students from all over the world, but we offer lower registration fees to members of NAAS (Nordic Association for American Studies), EAAS (European Association for American Studies) and ASA (American Studies Association in the U.S). The regular conference registration fee will be 120,00 euro and for the members 100,00 euro.

For more information, contact the Conference President Ari Helo (ari.helo@oulu.fi)

Note that papers for 2015 Orm Øverland Prize can still be submitted: To honor the work of Professor Orm Øverland, NAAS has created the Orm Øverland Prize (EUR 200), which since 2009 has been awarded to the best graduate student paper presented at the biennial NAAS conference. In addition to the monetary award, the winning paper is considered for publication in American Studies in Scandinavia, a peer-reviewed journal that NAAS publishes. For instructions on sending your paper, seehttps://sites.google.com/site/naasstudies/award

For more information, see https://sites.google.com/site/fasafinnishamericanstudies/naas-2015-conference

Registration now open at http://dppskillnet.ie/index.php/event-registration/?ee=78, or see the event’s Facebook page

A one-day symposium in Boston College Dublin on 5 September 2014, with contributions from both interested academics and practitioners of the art form (including performers, designers, musicians and producers). The purpose of this symposium is to explore the growth, current strength and history of this art in Ireland from the perspectives of
— culture and influence,
— history,
— gender, identity and society
— aesthetics (including staging, design, costuming and performance styles)
— music
We are particularly interested in encouraging exploration of these themes from the perspective of the recession in Ireland, arguably mirroring the development and innovation of the art form in the US of the 1930s. Throughout and in the wake of the Celtic Tiger, Irish society has undergone a period of rapid change, both positive and negative. Questions of gender and sexuality have become particularly entangled with themes of economic struggle and renewal. Burlesque offers a creative space within which to explore renegotiations of cultural, economic and sexual power bases. The relationship between opulence and austerity, the transgressive performances of class and gender and the exploration of notions of morality, sin and pleasure on the burlesque stage situate the art in a relationship of exchange with concepts of economic guilt and illusions of plenty, hence the title of the symposium.
The symposium will be composed of three to four panels, each a combination of academic and practitioner perspectives, culminating in a roundtable to include Dr Claire Nally, from Northumbria University, Phil T Gorgeous, a performer from Dublin, and Sarah Cleary of Trinity College Dublin. Topics for discussion might include the response of burlesque to changing social norms, particularly the relatively rapid pace of change in social perspectives on gender and same-sex issues; the history of burlesque in Ireland; the culture of experimentation in performative gender modes, including various forms of transvestism; the major artistic influences on the Dublin scene; the conjunction of self-declared “feminist”/”postfeminist”/“non-feminist” identities on the scene and the challenges for gender and identity in a changing Irish culture, among others.
This symposium will function at a nexus of interdisciplinary interests, including literary representation, gender and cultural studies, media studies, sociology and history, music and theatre/performance studies, combining academic discourse, practice-oriented discussion and performance. As a form of community engagement, collaboration with the practitioner community offers benefits to both interested academics and those practitioners seeking to raise awareness of the history and culture surrounding burlesque and neo-burlesque, as well as fostering a longer-term process of engagement with this art form and its growing contribution to the cultural identity of Ireland.

With thanks to Boston College, the Humanities Institute and the Irish Association for American Studies for their generous support.
Further information here

Questions should be sent to clare.hayes-brady@ucd.ie

Riddles of Form: Exploration and Discovery in Word and Image

Tenth International IAWIS/AIERTI Conference

University of Dundee, Scotland

11-15 August 2014

 

Abstracts for each of the sessions listed above can be found at:

http://www.scottishwordimage.org/conferences/iawis2014/list_of_sessions.htm

We invite submissions of proposals for 20 minute papers (abstract 250-300 words).

The extended deadline for submissions is Friday December 6, 2013.

Please contact swig2014@gmail.com to submit abstracts or with any further queries. Please indicate the title of the session at which your proposal is aimed and supply full contact information.

There will also be general sessions on Word and Image topics, so proposals do not necessarily have to fit into the sessions specified.

2015 IAAS Annual Conference

24th & 25th April, Trinity College Dublin

 IAAS 2015

Sight Unseen:

 

Seeing, Surveillance, and the Visual Sphere in American Culture

 

Standing on the bare ground […] all mean egotism vanishes. I become a transparent eye-ball; I am nothing; I see all […].

 

(Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nature, 1836)

 

From the maps of early explorers and the surveying techniques of those who carved up the land; through the Puritans’ anxious scrutiny of their own souls and those of their neighbours for signs of Satan’s influence; up to the Patriot Act, hacking scandals, and Wikileaks, the history, politics, and aesthetics of sight and seeing, of concealment and surveillance, display and invisibility have been central to the United States’ (and indeed America’s) development as a space and a nation. Crossing disciplinary boundaries, seeing and being seen are particularly pertinent issues in our image-driven culture, ones that are increasingly being taken up by literary critics and cultural commentators as this century progresses.

This conference therefore aims to bring together scholars whose work explores the vast range of texts, experiences, and socio-political structures that touch upon and are touched by the visual realm, especially but not exclusively in relation to sight as an instrument and agent of control and discipline. “Sight Unseen” is a two-day interdisciplinary conference for scholars within the Humanities, at any stage in their careers, with an interest in North America and whose research engages with history, literature, critical theory, drama, film, visual culture, architecture, music, geography, media studies, and political theory. The conference invites proposals for 20-minute presentations on any aspect of our broad theme. Potential topics include, but are not limited to:

 
  • Technologies of seeing and being seen
  • The role played by painting, photography, moving pictures, and smart phones in the creation of “America”
  • Sight and the body
  • Surface and depth
  • Light and shadow as cultural metaphors
  • The eye and the “I”
  • Social and cultural invisibility
  • Invisible histories, people, places, events, texts, documents, or issues
  • Overexposure, nudity/ nakedness, and/or pornography
  • Dress, clothing, and self-display
  • Theatricality and performance
  • “Big Government”, the Patriot Act, Wikileaks, and the politics of seeing
  • War, terrorism, security, and surveillance
  • Privacy and self-concealment
  • The home and the workplace as sites of visibility
  • Consumerism, consumption and the visual
  • Surveillance and medicine
 

The submissions window has now closed

Please contact us at IAASConference@gmail.com if you have any queries.

 
Please click here more information on the IAAS Annual Conference.
 

UCD Clinton Institute and the Roosevelt Institute Symposium

‘Progressivism in America, Past, Present and Future’

8th and 9th November 2013 

Leading figures from academia such as Joseph Stiglitz and Alan Brinkley, and from the media including E.J. Dionne, Christopher CaldwellJonathan Alter and Fintan O’Toole, will gather to discuss progressive politics in the United States.  Topics will include the legacies of Presidents such as Woodrow Wilson, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Bill Clinton; contemporary challenges such as climate change, and terrorism; debates about Barack Obama’s tenure; and prospects for the future.

Full programme available on http://www.ucdclinton.ie/ProgressivismSymposium

Registration fee €25, students free

To register please email Catherine.Carey@ucd.ie

 UCD Clinton Institute for American Studies 
 
Symposium  
 
‘The Ongoing Struggle for Civil Rights: The United States, Northern Ireland and Worldwide’
 
Saturday 5th October 2013
 
The Clinton Institute for American Studies and  the John Moore Newman Fellowship  presents a one-day symposium on the topic of comparative civil rights.  Building on existing research at the Clinton Institute, this event seeks to discuss, analyse and attempt to draw analogy between historic and contemporary civil and human rights campaigns both in Ireland and internationally.
 
Speakers include:
 Bernadette McAliskey(Socialist Republican Political Activist)  
Maryam al Khawaja (Bahrain Centre for Human Rights)
Minnijean Brown Trickey (Little Rock Nine)
Brian Dooley,(Human Rights First)
Dr. Máiréad Collins,
Prof. Peter Ling (University of Nottingham)
Dr. Rita Sakr (University of Kent),
Dr. Gareth Mulvenna (QUE),  
Dr. Stuart Ross
 Dr. Niall O Dochartaigh (NUIG)  
Prof. Fr. Thomas Murphy (Seattle University) 
 
Further information available on http://www.ucdclinton.ie/CivilRightsSymposium
 
Registration fee €10 and students free (includes refreshments and lunch).  To register please email Catherine.Carey@ucd.ie