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Call for Papers

"The Contentious Question of Culture(s)
in Contemporary Societies"
Interdisciplinary Conference
Department of Germanic and Romance Studies,
University of Delhi
Dehli (India)
1-3 March 2007

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Culture emerged as a keyword at the turn of the eighteenth
to the nineteenth centuries, as a term imbued with changing
meanings and questions in reaction to the experience of
modernization. Its inflationary use in more recent times
draws attention to the experience of more recent changes,
from decolonisation to the contemporary process of
globalisation and the increasing migration of people both
within and across national borders. International migrants
according to estimates today account for the world’s fifth
most populous “country”. Dramatic changes in demographic
composition are being further fuelled by ongoing forms of
political integration such as the process of
Europeanisation. In this context, the multiple meanings
invested in the word culture are markers of real, often
violent contemporary conflicts as well as of their frequent
mythification. From multiculturalism to wars in the name of
culture, from disputes on history to debates on state
policy, the question of culture(s) has evidently become a
central concern in responses to the nature of contemporary
society and its future, even as it stands in apparent
contradiction to the decidedly economic forces driving the
processes of change.

Not surprisingly, the use of the word culture, and its
often-unstated assumptions, has given rise to considerable
theoretical controversy. What exactly do we mean when we
talk of culture? Is it associated with language, ethnicity,
religion, nationality, a civilization, a way of life or
everyday social practices? Is it conceived as relatively
unchanging, as something that is threatened by the impact
with other ‘cultures’ or as a set of ideas and practices
that is subject to historical and social change? How are
these notions of culture affected by the changing forms of
political, economic and military domination and the
vicissitudes of the postcolonial world? Questions of
representation and interpretation of cultures have greatly
impacted on these theoretical debates, both in the field of
the social sciences and in the study of literature, film and
the arts. Curiously, the debates have even entered the field
of the natural sciences as seen in the coining of the word
‘meme’ as a unit of cultural information in analogy to the
word gene.

The seminar will bring together scholars from different
disciplines to address these questions. It will explore the
various notions of culture underlying contemporary debates,
the artistic forms with which writers and other artists have
reflected on these notions and their social and political
implications.

Please send the title and a brief synopsis (200-300 words)
of your proposed paper by 15 December 2006. Each paper will
be allotted 20 minutes for presentation. Given the shortage
of resources, the Department is unable to offer travel fare.
However, we would provide local hospitality in the
University Guest House for outstation participants. A
selection of papers of the seminar will be subsequently
published.


Contact:

Department of Germanic and Romance Studies
University of Delhi
Delhi – 110007
University Road
India
Tel: +91 (11) 27666426, 27667725 Ext.1296
Email: [email protected] / [email protected]
Web: http://www.du.ac.in/grsseminar2007.pdf


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