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Call for Papers

"Postcolonial Exotic"
Interdisciplinary Conference
University of Otago
Dunedin (New Zealand)
24-26 June 2009

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Postcolonial theory and criticism have consistently pointed
to the exploitative and oppressive effects of exoticism in
relation to the (post)colonised world: where Edward Said’s
account of orientalism as a mode of perception facilitated
extensive postcolonial critiques of colonial as well as more
recent constructions of ‘the exotic,’ contemporary work also
takes account of the global late-capitalist system in which
these exoticist discourses circulate. However, while the
notion of the exotic has been subjected to rigorous
postcolonial critique, it persists in both popular and
institutional constructions of culture and cultural
difference. Is this the persistence of old exoticisms, or
are there new forms, objects, modes of circulation?

An exoticist perspective constitutes ‘the other’ as the
domesticated and known other, positing the lure of
difference while assimilating its object to the circuits of
consumption (of ideas, experiences, objects, images, and so
on). It constructs the other, or projects otherness, from
the point of view of the hegemonic Same, the known, the
familiar. What, then, is the fate of the other, of
otherness? As the global economy has shifted towards an
emphasis on consumption, information, services and
experiences — such as tourism, domestic or abroad — and
towards a need to market not only products but even nations
for ‘difference’, we are daily addressed through, and
incited to participate in, exoticist discourses. Even
postcolonial practices in teaching and research are
susceptible to complicity with the exoticism it supposedly
critiques.

This conference seeks to investigate the various ways
exoticism functions across a wide range of social,
political, cultural and ecological domains. We ask such
questions as: Why do exoticist practices and discourses
persist in the face of postcolonial critique? Are these
discourses sustained and circulated through old or new
mechanisms? Is there, perhaps, anything enabling or agential
for the (post)colonised in mobilising discourses of the
exotic? How can places, foods, fashion and experiences
continue to be marketed as ‘exotic,’ or through appeal to
‘the exotic,’ despite a growing awareness of the dangers of
such marketing? What politics underlie the embrace or
proscription of exotic plants and animals; how do nostalgia,
aesthetics, ecology, environmentalism and bio-security
inflect these stances? Who, what or where are the new
objects of exoticist discourses? How has exoticism inflected
discourses of sexuality? How does exoticism signify
differently through trans-national communications circuits
and flows of images and products, and at nation-state
borders? How does globalisation point to both total access
and knowability, and the allure of exotic otherness? What
other forms of otherness remain possible within this
politico-semiotic economy? How does exoticism relate to the
increasing hybridity of populations and cultures, as well as
plant and animal biological forms? After colonial discourses
of degeneration with transplantation of ‘exotics’, what
discourses pertain today relating to ‘transplantation’, to
subjects of migration and diaspora? Have practices in
postcolonial studies theory and research overcome the
complicity of that field with notions of exoticism, or do
they continue to underlie or haunt the field?

We invite 20-minute papers or panels of up to three
20-minute papers from across the disciplines, including
interdisciplinary work, that address any aspect of the topic
of the postcolonial exotic, such as:

- The persistence of colonial forms of exoticism, or
  exoticist practices, discourses
- The contemporary emergence of new forms, practices or
  discourses of exoticism
- The adequacy or otherwise of postcolonial theory or
  critique to intervene in and subvert exoticist discourses
- Contemporary circuits of exoticist representations
- Exoticism and indigeneity
- The relation of exoticism to other forms of difference,
  otherness
- The politics of the exotic as applied to plants and
  animals
- Desires or affects of the exotic; exoticism/eroticism;
  fetishism
- Banal vs. spectacular exoticism
- How exoticism articulates race/racism, or
  nation/nationalism/culture
- The place of exoticism in postcolonial studies teaching
  and research

Please send abstracts of up to 500 words and a short
biographical note (panels should submit an abstract and
biographical note for each paper) to Dr Chris Prentice by 15
April, 2009.

Keynote Speakers:
Professor Robert J.C. Young, New York University
Professor Graham Huggan, University of Leeds
Associate Professor Susie O’Brien, McMaster University


Contact:

Dr Chris Prentice
University of Otago
PO Box 56
Dunedin
New Zealand
Phone: +64 3 479 8920
Email: [email protected]

 
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