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Call for Papers

Theme: Human Rights and the Humanities
Type: International Conference
Institution: American University of Beirut
Location: Beirut (Lebanon)
Date: 9.–11.5.2012
Deadline: 15.11.2011

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The International Conference on Human Rights and the Humanities will
be hosted by American University of Beirut May 9-11, 2012. 
In the October 2006 PMLA special issue on human rights, Domna Stanton
argues that the humanities provides a “set of interpretive and
critical discourses and practices … that aim to dissent from and
revise traditional or dominant readings and understandings” (1519).
As such, when the humanities are placed in conversation with human
rights discourse, a space for critique, interrogation, and
exploration opens; yet at the same time the humanities remain
grounded in a western Enlightenment tradition which often reifies
power imbalances present in human rights discourse. Building from
this paradoxical relationship, The International Conference on Human
Rights and the Humanities at American University of Beirut seeks to
continue the push of human rights discourse from exclusively legal
and political discourses and open it to alternative framings,
questions and perspectives that the humanities can offer. This move
creates a space to (re)imagine the ways in which human rights are
represented, narrated, implemented, and enforced.

While at its core this conference engages with systemic issues and
the globalization of human rights, particular interest will be paid
to the ME/NA region in the midst of the ongoing Arab Spring. Beirut’s
location as a crossroads of cultures (Phoenician, Roman, Ottoman,
French, and Arab to name a few) coupled with its modern cosmopolitan
flair provides a unique setting for such a vital conversation.

Some possible topics include:
- W(r)i(gh)ting Rights
- Who is the human in human rights?
- What role does narrative play in constructing a subject of rights
- The universal / particular dichotomy
- Pedagogical approaches for human rights in the humanities classroom
- What are the origins of rights and what does that suggest about
  human rights today?
- The globalization of human rights
- Comparative approaches to human rights
- The role of critique in human rights discourse
- The ethics of reading and representing trauma / atrocities
- Aesthetics and human rights
- Alternative approaches to a Eurocentric rights model
- Film and human rights
- Indigenous rights and the nation-state
- Commodification of human rights
- Humanitarianism vs. human rights

Please send abstracts (maximum 300 words) or session proposals
(maximum 500 words) and brief CV by 15 Nov 2011. Notifications will
be sent by 15 December 2011. On your abstracts and session proposals
please include your name, institution, city, state and / or country,
email address and phone number. E-mail your abstracts/session
proposals as a Word file. Please note that each presentation is
limited to 25 minutes (including questions).

Questions may be addressed to the conference chair Dr. Alexander
Hartwiger at [email protected].


Contact:

Dr. Alexander Hartwiger
Department of English
American University of Beirut
Fisk Hall, Rm 221
PO Box 11-0236
Beirut 1107 2020
Lebanon
Email: [email protected]
 
 
 
 
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