Gep-eders,
This just crossed my email… might be  of interest to many of you.
-sv


Call for Papers, Panels and/or Workshop Proposals

Petrocultures: Oil, Energy, Culture
University of Alberta: September 6, 7th and 8th, 2012

The “Petrocultures: Oil, Energy, Culture” conference will take place on 
September 6, 7th and 8th, 2012, at the University of Alberta (Edmonton, 
Canada).  Keynote speakers include Allan Stoekl (Penn State University), Warren 
Cariou (University of Manitoba) and Ursula Biemann (video artist, Switzerland).

Petrocultures will bring together scholars, writers, filmmakers and artists 
from around the world who are engaged in an exploration of the social and 
cultural dimensions and impacts of oil and energy.  The conference will examine 
and (re)assess how energy has been and remains an intrinsic part of 
socio-political life and cultural productivity, with a focus on two areas of 
research:

1)  How does our understanding of socio-cultural objects, events and phenomena 
change if we frame an analysis of them explicitly in relation to oil (and 
energy more generally)? What insights would we gain across the disciplines from 
such a theoretical/methodological maneuver? For instance, what might happen if 
we frame cultural and intellectual periods (as we do in the study of 
literature) not in terms of movements (e.g., modernism), nations (British 
modernism), or centuries (18th, 19th, 20th…), but in relation to dominant forms 
of energy at any given moment?

2)  How do energy resources that fuel the exploitation of the environment 
impact not only everyday life but also the form and content of its 
representation? What is the potential of these cultural representations 
produced through multiple technologies of publication and 
artistic/communicative production (e.g., art, film, literature), to rupture 
and/or change the ways in which we live with and relate to oil?

We invite papers, panels and workshop proposals that take up the above 
questions as well as contributions that address any of the wide range of topics 
related to petrocultures:

● labour in petrocultures (influx of temporary foreign workers, transient 
labour forces, the rights or lack thereof of labour, etc.)
● the composition of communities in historical and contemporary oil 
economies
● education in energy societies
● health (sex, drugs, addiction)
● the intersection of cultural and environmental issues (resource 
management, water and oil, etc.)
● Aboriginal cultures and societies (land and mineral rights, community 
safety, race in petrocultures, etc.)
● gender issues and women’s rights in male dominated labour markets
● politics and social-political life in petro-states
● and the impacts of all of these issues on forms of cultural production 
(art, literature, film, etc.) that attempt to represent and address the 
socio-cultural realities of living alongside oil technologies.

Papers will be accepted based on the merit of the proposed study, originality 
of approach, and fit with the aims and theme of the conference.  Graduate 
students are especially encouraged to apply. Please indicate when you submit 
your abstract whether you are interested in also participating (at your own 
cost) in a three day excursion on (September 9th- 11th) to Northern Alberta to 
tour the oil/tar sands. A selection of papers and presentations from the 2012 
conference will be published in an edited collection on Petrocultures by 
McGill-Queen’s University Press.

Deadline for submission: October 15, 2011.  Decisions will be announced by 
December 1st, 2011.

Please send all proposals to:
[email protected]<x-msg://964/[email protected]>
(c/o Imre Szeman and Sheena Wilson)


Types of submissions:
· 15-20 minute individual presentation: conference paper.

· 45-60 minute panel/roundtable (3-4 presenters).

·  90-minute workshop (hands-on learning, interactive): Interactive sessions 
that encourage participant involvement.  These workshops can be focused on 
generating discussion and recording ideas on specific subjects and themes.  
These workshops can also encourage creative responses to oil and energy (e.g., 
through a writing workshop, a visual arts workshop etc.)

Propose an individual paper: Please send a 250 word abstract and a 100 word 
biography, as well as your contact information

Propose a panel: Please send a 250 word abstract for the panel, with a 
descriptive title for each presentation, and a 50 word bio and contact 
information for all members of the panel. When submitting the proposal, please 
copy it to all panel-participants to facilitate future correspondences.

Propose a workshop: The Petrocultures conference will be the ideal venue for 
exploring theoretical and practical approaches to oil and energy in culture.  
If you would like to lead a workshop session either independently or with other 
presenters, please submit a 250 word abstract for the workshop, with a 100 word 
bio for all workshop leaders.

Petrocultures is supported through funding from the Kule Institute for Advanced 
Study (University of Alberta), Campus Saint Jean (University of Alberta) and 
the Canada Research Chair in Cultural Studies.

Jen Schneider
Assistant Professor, Liberal Arts and International Studies
Colorado School of Mines
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