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Call for Papers

"Public Memory and Ethnicity"
Interdisciplinary Conference
York Center for Public Memory Studies,
Lewis and Clark College
Portland, OR (USA)
26-28 October 2007

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The York Center for Public Memory Studies will sponsor a
conference on Public Memory and Ethnicity this October
26-28, 2007 at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Oregon.
The conference will feature presentations by scholars in
rhetorical studies, history, Jewish studies, communication
studies, African American studies, and other disciplines. We
are happy to announce the following featured speakers:

- Erna Paris, author of several books including the award
winning Long Shadows: Truth, Lies, and History

- Stephen H. Browne, eminent scholar of rhetoric and public
memory

- Mark McPhail, author of several books on African American
history and racial discourse

* Dexter Gordon, prolific scholar and director of African
American Studies at the University of Puget Sound

Scholars who wish to be included in the concurrent sessions
are invited to submit abstracts by August 1, 2007. Those
selected for presentation will be notified by August 15th.
Applications for presentation, including a one-page,
single-spaced abstract, should be sent to G. Mitchell Reyes
at <[email protected]>. The conference will be held on the
campus of Lewis and Clark College.

The study of public memory and ethnicity is increasingly an
inter-disciplinary phenomenon. This conference seeks to
capitalize on that interdisciplinarity, bringing scholars
together from various fields to share and test ideas
regarding the connections between public memory and
ethnicity. At minimum, public memory assumes that memory is
not only an individual phenomenon, it is also a collective
and public one. Individuals do not simply remember
individually, they get remembered in strategic and stylized
ways. These practices of remembrance serve several important
social and ontological functions: they mark what is and what
is not worthy of memory; they reveal cultural values; they
instruct and order our social world; and, taken together,
they tell a narrative out of which a sense of collective
identity emerges. This conference seeks to connect with and
extend our understanding of public memory by considering its
relationship with race and ethnicity. How does public memory
carve up race and ethnicity? How do race and ethnicity
constrain public memory? These questions only begin a long
list of interesting problems found at the nexus of public
memory and ethnicity. The conference will explore these
issues and related problems regarding the influence of
remembrance on the order of things.

The conference is organized in connection with the
conference series on public memory developed at Syracuse
University, and will lead to publication of a university
press book to be edited by the conference organizer. All
papers presented will be eligible for consideration for
publication.


Contact:

G. Mitchell Reyes, Ph.D.
Department of Communication, MSC 35
Lewis and Clark College
0615 SW Palatine Hill Rd
Portland, OR 97219
USA
Email: [email protected]

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