__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

"People Make Places: Ways of Feeling the World"
10th International SIEF Congress
Société Internationale d'Ethnologie et de Folclore (SIEF)
Centro em Rede de Investigação em Antropologia (CRIA)
Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Lisbon (Portugal)
17-21 April 2011

__________________________________________________


Theme and sub-themes

The ways in which people construct their views, opinions, values and
practices are constantly being re-negotiated and re-interpreted in
various creative forms. The 10th  SIEF International congress intends
to elucidate and develop perspectives on this topic by focusing on
the making of places, and invites colleagues and other scholars to
present new perspectives on how people's lives, memories, emotions
and values interact with places and localities. The conference will
be structured around three themes: Shaping Lives; Creativity and
Emotions; and Ecology and Ethics. In each of the themes, case studies
as well as inquiries into theory are welcome.  The conference aims to
encourage in particular boundary-crossing explorations of
ontological, epistemological and ethical issues that arise from a
greater emphasis on a sensitive and even sensuous approach to
knowledge and understanding.

The question of how people make the places they inhabit remains wide
open. We invite proposals that deal with the role of cultural
practices in the creation of locality: how a space turns into a
particular place; how people relate to, construct, and are
constructed by, the places they live in; and what the practices are
that shape those places. Other questions to be posed include: What
new approaches for the study of the emotional links between people
and the places they inhabit are being developed? What theoretical
tools can be used by ethnologists to understand a sense of belonging?
What is the role of expressive culture linked to daily life in the
shaping of the places? How do we combine ecological and ethical
issues with ethnographic data, especially in cases where there seems
to be a clash between what people do with their places and general
ecological and ethic concerns?

The variety of places that could be explored in this process include,
among many others: work and home places, places for vacation, places
for the dead, places to pray, places to create, places to destroy and
to be destroyed, places to memorialize, places to arrive and to
leave, as well as places that disappear and reappear, inside places,
and non-places. Notions of multi-belonging, shared places, and
generational differences all show how making places is a process that
is not univocal, and people make places as much as places make
people. New ways of making places - through the virtual space and
internet - should also be taken into consideration.

Each day of the conference, a specific theme will be introduced by
two invited keynote speakers, leading international scholars, and
discussed further in a series of panel sessions, some of which will
run in parallel. Workshops, intended to open to practice-based
research, and poster sessions, will also take place. We invite
colleagues to participate and propose panels directed at the general
theme and the three daily sub themes.

Day 1: Shaping Lives

Our disciplines have from their early beginnings contributed to the
understanding of how people are shaping lives. The study of
narratives and beliefs, of material culture and practice still belong
to the core of our analytical enterprises. However, new perspectives
and new analytical horizons suggest new questions to both old and new
material. Shaping lives is also about creating and sustaining memory.
Memory in its turn makes places predictable and readable to cultural
practices, to lived experience. But memory is also changeable and the
object of additive interpretation. Both in past and in present people
have moved between places, within sets of narratives and practices.
Contemporary culture interpreted as global and de-territorialized can
be challenged by past experiences and new dimensions of culture of
the past can be detected when being confronted by today's practices.

Reflecting on such perspectives several topics and questions can be
addressed: By which means and strategies do people shape their lives?
The relevance of media and mediation is obvious, as is the
relationship between memory and practice. Everyday practices,
symbols, rituals and religious values might be taken into
consideration. And how are similarities and differences between human
beings, nature and 'society' constructed and objectified? How are
lives shaped as seen from the individual, from the group or from
policy makers? The implications of memory as an important element of
shaping lives also include the construction and use of history,
without which human conditions can hardly be conceived. Is
de-territorialization a way of neutralizing memory and history or is
it only a strategy for making memory and history cosmopolitan?

Day 2: Creativity & Emotions

Within our anthropological disciplines the knowledge of the influence
of culture on creativity and emotions is still rather limited. This
is due more to a lack of ethnography and under-theorizing than to
their elusiveness. Emotions and creativity are major factors of
change and continuity within all sorts of contexts and places; an
ethnological engagement with them is therefore important. The idea of
creativity as a basic element for personal existence may accentuate
contemporary concerns with issues of agency, but it may also
stimulate the refashioning of classical themes of social and cultural
identity. To what extent, then, are emotions and creativity
idiosyncratic, and to what extent can general cultural principles be
detected that affect them? How are emotions and creativity perceived
by individuals and groups and in what ways do they influence daily
life and the making of places? What is the role of emotions in the
construction of a sense of belonging in a globalized world? What is
the role of creativity in dealing with increasing contacts of people
and cultural forms and ideas under current globalization?
Furthermore, how does the organization of the world and the
construction of places reflect itself on the ways of feeling the
world?

Emotions remain a collective and powerful social engine. Some of
today's collective performances (such as theatre, music or art) are
related to place belonging and indigenous identity claims. How can
emotions help us to question the transmission between the performers
and their audience? How do emotions, like nostalgia, suffering or
joy, deal with traditional patterns (either inherited or invented)
and regenerate or transform feeling about one's place? Those
questions should open vast queries, not only about the classical
artistic fields of anthropology, but also heritage places, local
festivals, web arena, cultural and tourism market, war and
nation-building propaganda, diaspora communities, globalized
religions, which are all linked with aesthetic values, human capacity
of creativity and emotional background of social life. And, as a
subsidiary problem, what is the place of the researcher himself in
those processes touching or affecting us? How do these circumstances
influence our disciplines and their academic output, thinking that
scholars, like artists, are supposed to be creative and bring
elements of originality and appropriateness to their research?

Day 3: Ecology & Ethics

Culture takes place. We need to reflect on what that simple fact
means, in general and for our disciplines in particular. People
rarely take a place as they find it, but do they actually make - in
the constructivist sense - the places they live in, or are they
rather co-creators shaping the places that they are shaped by? On the
third day of the conference, we want to put a spotlight on the
ecological relationships with both human and non-human makers of
places through which culture is lived, and on the responsibilities
that we as researchers face when we are dealing with them, both 'in
the field' and afterwards, in our ethnography and beyond.
Intellectually, most of us are aware that we are part of 'the field'
which is also part of us - but are we actually addressing that issue
concretely in our work, and if so: how? What are our responsibilities
as researchers, and who are we responsible to? What can we learn from
neighbouring disciplines, such as cultural geography or human
ecology? To what extent does our ecological connectedness with the
people we study in their various places provide a justification for
engaged ethnology/anthropology, or is it rather the reason why we
ought to maintain our objective distance? Whose call is this, in the
first instance - that of our institutional ethics review boards or
promotions committees; the local ecosphere with the past, present and
future generations of its constituents; or a generalised moral
conscience? Who are the peers by whose standards our work should be
judged, and why they? These and other questions will be addressed on
the third day of the conference.

Submissions

The call for papers will close on 25 October 2010. 

Please note the following:
- Proposals must be made via the online form available on the
  conference website, not by emailed attachment. The link to the form
  is at the foot of each panel/workshop page.
- You will be asked to provide a short abstract (no more than 300
  characters, including spaces) and a long abstract (no more than 250
  words); you can indicate co-authors, giving their email addresses;
  and you can request specific audio-visual technology for your
  presentation.
- Each panel/workshop page shows a title and abstract and the
  names of its convenors. It does not show convenor email addresses,
  for anti-spam reasons. If you wish to contact the convenors
  directly, click on the email links to use an in-built email
  messaging system. If you cannot work that, please email
  <[email protected]> to obtain relevant email addresses.
- Panel/workshop convenors have been asked to make their
  decisions over which papers to accept by 15 November. They will
  email you. Accepted abstracts will then show on the panel/workshop
  page.

You may only make one presentation, although you may also convene one
panel/workshop and/or act as discussant for one panel/workshop.  You
may submit multiple proposals; however, this is not encouraged;
instead we will attempt to re-house any papers which were initially
rejected by panel/workshop convenors due to lack of space (rather
than quality) after the call has closed. This will take place from 15
November to 15 December 2010.

In Panels, each presenter will be given up to 30 minutes, with a
maximum of 20 minutes presenting and 10 minutes for
questions/discussion. The format of workshops may be different;
details will be included in the description of individual workshops.

All presenters must be members of SIEF, and have paid their
subscription (€20) for 2011 before the conference. However, you may
propose a paper before joining. If and when your paper is accepted,
non-members will be asked to sign up.

Languages

SIEF is officially trilingual, allowing presentations in English,
French and German. However it is up to the decision of the panel
convenors as to which languages they will accept in their
panel/workshop. Certainly not all delegates will understand French or
German, so those presenting in other languages should have a summary
in English and possibly a print-out of the paper (in this language)
for those who struggle with the oral presentation, to follow. In the
first instance please contact the convenors of the relevant panel and
ask them if they are happy to accept a paper in a language besides
English.


Contact:

Organizing Committee
10th International SIEF Congress
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.nomadit.co.uk/sief/sief2011/
 
 
 
 
__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
http://interphil.polylog.org

Intercultural Philosophy Calendar:
http://cal.polylog.org

__________________________________________________
 
 

Reply via email to