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Call for Papers

"Processes of Subjectivation: Colonial and Postcolonial Perspectives"
Ph.D. Course and Conference
Saxo Institute, History Department, University of Copenhagen
Copenhagen (Denmark)
16-18 August 2010

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This joint Ph.D. course and conference sets out to investigate the
nexus between processes of subjectivation and various forms of
colonial and postcolonial governance. Subjectivation refers to
processes whereby new moral subjects are coming into being via
practices of the self. Within dissimilar colonial and postcolonial
projects, however, subjectivation took many different forms, happened
on different levels, and can be examined and understood in multiple
ways. In colonies and metropoles, for example, states, educational and
scientific institutions, missionary societies, philanthropists and
many other agents used various educational techniques to mould the
bodies and minds of children, men and women so as to fit the roles
considered appropriate to their particular gender, race, or class.
Questions of childrearing, childhood, and education in colonies,
metropoles, and postcolonial societies figured centrally in these
processes of subjectivation. Likewise, processes of subjectivation are
often linked with the introduction of technologies, which create new
lifestyles and types of subjects who are better suited to inhabit a
colonial or postcolonial world structured according to certain
technologies. Recently, however, the idea that colonial rule depended
on making certain types of subjectivity has also been questioned.
Rather, it is argued, colonial rule depended on a more traditional
kind of authority. Doubt has also been raised about the extent to
which processes of subjectivation can adequately grasp the
interactions between colonial power systems and indigenous people.

To further explore such questions of subjectivation, the Ph.D. course
and conference invites contributions, which explore what kinds of
subjectivities were considered necessary to the functioning of
colonial and postcolonial orders and how they were fostered. We also
invite contributions that explore the extent to which processes of
subjectivation were played out in logical and structured modes and the
way in which such processes were contested and challenged.

The joint Ph.D. course and conference will consist of four sessions
with presentations from leading experts in the field and separate
sessions with Ph.D. presentations.

Sessions
- Colonial Governmentality: Security, Territory, Population
- Colonial Childrearing
- Technologies and Subjectivation
- Biological Determinism and Subjectivation

Speakers and discussants
- David Arnold, Professor of Asian and Global History, Department of
  History, University of Warwick
- Gurminder K Bhambra, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology,
  University of Warwick
- Michelle Brattain, Associate Professor, Department of History,
  Georgia State University
- Niels Brimnes, Associate Professor, Department of History and Area
  Studies, Aarhus University
- Poul Duedahl, Assistant Professor, Department of History, Aalborg
  University
- Aigul Kulnazarova, Professor at the School of Global Studies, Tama
  University
- Nara Milanich, Assistant Professor in History, Columbia University
- Gyan Prakash, Professor of History, Princeton University
- Satadru Sen, Assistant Professor, History Department, Queens College

Registration
Applications must be sent 1 March 2010 and must include the following:
- A short outline of the paper to be presented (max. one page)
- CV
- A short description of your Ph.D.-project of no more than one page

Applications should be sent by email to: [email protected].

All applicants will be informed by 15th of March 2010 if they have
been admitted or not.

The final paper should be submitted no later than 1st July 2010 in the
form of a *.doc or *.pdf file attached to an email message directed
to: [email protected].
The paper should not exceed 10.000 words.

Ph.D. students participating with a paper are credited with 4.5
ECTS-diploma (3 ECTS for participation without paper).

Participation fee
A basic fee of DKK 1.000 will cover tuition, lunch, coffee/tea during
lectures and Ph.D. sessions as well as dinners.

Travel grants
A limited number of grants are available to cover some of the expenses
for travel and accommodation for non-Scandinavian participants. Please
indicate in your application if you would like to apply for such a
grant.


Contact:

Søren Ivarsson
Njalsgade 80
DK-2300 Copenhagen S
Denmark 
Email: [email protected]
 
 
 
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