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Call for Papers

"(B)orders. Re-Imagining Cultural, Political, and Media Spaces in a
Globalizing World"
Interdisciplinary Conference
Graduate Program "Formations of the Global", University of Mannheim
Bronnbach (Germany)
3-4 September 2010

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A globalizing world is characterized by continuous processes of
constructing different worlds within one world, separated by
boundaries. The act of breaking, erecting, and shifting borders
enables a re-imagination of the established cultural, political, and
media spaces. Apart from geographical (b)orders, metaphorical, and
epistemological (b)orders are constantly redefined and resituated.

The conference particularly addresses doctoral students and
post-doctoral researchers in History, Media and Communication
Studies, as well as Literary and Cultural Studies. Historical
research is refocused by emphasizing the development of spaces and
their delineations in different time periods. In Literary and
Cultural Studies, the formation of individual and collective cultural
identities across borders constitutes a focal point of analysis. In a
globalizing world, media cultures are created across established
boundaries and distant locations are connected instantaneously. The
transdisciplinary character of the conference aims at a
multiperspectival understanding of the role of (b)orders in processes
of globalization.

The conference will feature keynotes and panels, offering room for
thorough discussion. There will be three interdisciplinary workshop
panels. Papers should address one or more of the following questions:

1. (B)orders and Subjectivity: Hybridity, Liminality, and Experiences
   of Contingency
- What is the significance of border cultures, border zones, liminal
  margins, and hybrid spaces?
- What kinds of identity formations are triggered by shifting borders
  and emerging new spaces?
- How do borders provide order to subjective experiences of
  contingency?

2. (B)orders and Community: Integration, Exclusion, and Solidarity
- How resilient are established borders in (re)defining and
  (re)constructing communities and collective identities?
- Do international help and solidarity dissolve or consolidate borders
  between countries and continents?
- In what way have discourses on global integration shaped the social,
  economic, and political orders of the modern world?

3. (B)orders and the Polis: PR, Politics, and Public Spheres
- Does the trans-nationalization and interlocking of various mediated
  public spheres give rise to a “global polis”?
- How are public relations activities of companies, NGOs, and
  nation-states shaped by the challenges of cross-border
  communication?
- How do national political elites interact with a globalizing
  popular culture in structuring public discourses?

We invite one-page proposals to [email protected] by
May 15, 2010. Presentations should not exceed 20 minutes.

Kloster Bronnbach (www.kloster-bronnbach.de) is located southeast of
Frankfurt am Main, in the ‘Taubertal’ region. It is a former
Cistertian cloister, which today hosts different types of events. The
cloister can be reached from Frankfurt by car within an hour. For
train connections please consult www.bahn.de. For presenters of
accepted papers some travel funds are available upon request.


Contact:

Graduate Program "Formations of the Global"
University of Mannheim
L 15, 1-6
D-68131 Mannheim
Germany
Telefon +49 (0)621 / 181-3567
Telefax +49 (0)621 / 181-2343
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.phil.uni-mannheim.de/pk_globalisierung/neuigkeiten/
 
 
 
 
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