__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Comparative Caribbeans
Type: Interdisciplinary Conference
Institution: Comparative Literature Department, Emory University
Location: Atlanta, GA (USA)
Date: 3.–5.11.2011
Deadline: 1.9.2011

__________________________________________________


Recent debates in Comparative Literary studies have brought the very
idea and practice of comparison under scrutiny. What are the limits
and possibilities of comparison in a time marked by an ongoing
process of globalization? What is the status of “world literature” as
a category of analysis? What are the epistemological, political, and
ethical stakes in doing work across disciplinary, linguistic, and
geo-political boundaries?

This conference seeks to contribute to this ongoing discussion by
taking the Caribbean as its point of departure. As a region marked by
linguistic, historical, and geographical differences and as a site of
displaced origins and rhizomatic identifications, the Caribbean not
only necessitates comparatist perspectives, but may also help us
reconfigure how comparison is thought and practiced.

We invite work that cuts across linguistic and disciplinary
boundaries, bringing Caribbean art, literature, and culture into
challenging dialogues with other traditions in order to map new
trajectories for further comparative engagement. We are particularly
interested in highlighting work that does not subsume Caribbean
cultural and literary production under the umbrella of “area
studies,” but instead draws on Caribbean aesthetic and philosophical
traditions in an effort to rethink some of the theoretical and
methodological axioms that underlie contemporary comparative studies.

Keynote Speakers:

Professor Guillermina De Ferrari (Spanish and Portuguese, University
of Wisconsin, Madison)
Professor Natalie Melas (Comparative Literature, Cornell University)
Professor Mara Negrón (Comparative Literature and Gender Studies,
University of Puerto Rico)
Professor Rubén Ríos Ávila (Comparative Literature and Hispanic
Studies, University of Puerto Rico)

Possible areas of inquiry:

- The Caribbean and Post-Structuralism
- Caribbean Perspectives on Theories of Trauma and Memory
- Comparative Post-Colonialities
- Plantation Traces: The Caribbean and the American South
- Theories and Poetics of Relation, Creolization, and Hybridity
- Comparative Approaches to Migratory Movements and the Caribbean
  Diaspora
- Eco-Criticism and Planetary Archipelagos: Remapping Geographies
- A Post-Revolutionary Caribbean? Liberation and Alternative
  Philosophies of History
- Artistic and Performative Engagements with the Caribbean
- Caribbean Vulnerabilities
- Caribbean Queer Mappings
- Piracy, the Law, and the State: Revisiting Sovereignty, Empire, and
  Capital

Please send your abstracts of 300-500 words with a short bio to
<[email protected]> by September 1, 2011. Letters of
acceptance will be sent no later than September 7, 2011. We invite
submissions from senior and junior faculty, graduate students, and
from independent scholars.

Join us on Facebook
http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/profile.php?id=100002151392127       


Contact:

Christina León
Emory University
Email: [email protected]
Web: http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/profile.php?id=100002151392127
 
 
 
 
__________________________________________________


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

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

__________________________________________________
 
 

Reply via email to