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Call for Papers

Theme: Globalization and 'Minor' Cultural Groups
Subtitle: The Role of So-Called Minority Cultures in Rethinking the
Future of Modern Societies
Type: International Symposium
Institution: Research Group 'Suds d'Amériques, Espaces Atlantiques',
Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines
Location: Guyancourt (France)
Date: 19.–21.6.2013
Deadline: 28.2.2013

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The contemporary international reflection on the relationship between
minority/ethnic groups and globalization—a relationship presented as
a dialectical / dialogical one—offers today new and hybrid
perspectives on the challenges of globalization. The texts which deal
with this relationship are characterized by the multifarious
connections they formulate between a multiplicity of knowledge areas,
the intervention of viewpoints from different fields of study
(literature, history, philosophy, sociology, political theory,
international relations, etc.). This variety of perspectives that
serve to highlight the local and global issues of minority cultures
allows for a diversification of the topics addressed by “mainstream”
global studies literature and encourages the development of new
strands of reflection which have not been given enough space so far
in the literature that evaluates and critiques globalization
phenomena. The inclusion of these new, “minor” perspectives from
across the globe in the reflection on globalization will serve to
expand the analysis on, and illuminate certain aspects of, specific
global phenomena (economic, social, cultural, etc.).

Minority groups, whose way of life has historically suffered from
globalization, are often cited as victims of global processes, but
they are rarely studied for the techniques or technologies of
accommodation and resistance they have implemented as a response to
global processes—the most devastating of these processes being
colonization in its various aspects. Indeed, globalist literature
does not yet offer a conceptualization or theorizing of the social,
cultural, political and territorial continuity of “minorized”
cultures, let alone does it afford enough analytical space to these
so-called cultural minorities in the process of questioning the
values and practices of globalization. For that reason, the purpose
of our symposium on the link between globalization and “minor”
cultural groups is to bring to the forefront of global studies these
new perspectives that address the relationship between globalization
and the experiences of cultural minorities worldwide. these
literatures that take into account the perspectives that prove
crucial in the necessary process of questioning contemporary global
values and practices, as well as complicating current debates on the
causes, consequences, future of globalization processes in the fields
of politics, education, culture, the economy, etc.

These new literatures on the relationship between globalization and
minority cultures seek to reformulate this relationship on new bases
by relying on the possibilities of a cross-cultural exchange between
different, not to say oppositional, praxes. The goal here is to
develop new theories and practices of transculturality that seek to
link different theoretical and cultural spheres (mainstream and
minorized) in order to formulate new global discussions about
appropriate responses to give in defiance of the adverse effects of
globalization (such responses could be a review and critique of the
theoretical foundations of globalization and the subsequent
formulation of more humane and humanist theoretical bases to global
practices).

The historical theme of structural continuity, a crucial theme in the
literature about ethnic resistance to the colonizing process, has
been taken up by citizens of nation-states who, given the global
crisis in progress, are looking for ways to survive and resist a
whole network of anti-democratic and destructive global projects,
while at the same time relying on constructive global practices (such
as technologies of communication which are means to publicize the
many instances of political, economic and cultural violence worldwide
qua consequences of global processes which need to be unveiled and
analyzed ). It is therefore appropriate to reflect upon the links,
the common features, the possibilities for developing collaborative
projects between ethnic and mainstream anti-globalization movements
in the fight against the deleterious aspects and effects of
globalization.

The point is not to idealize or glorify the experiences of minority
cultures in the face of change, nor is it to question the value of
existing reflections on globalization that are rooted in the history
and experience of mainstream cultural groups. The point is to strike
more connections between different experiences in order to think up
the best alternatives to the global economic and political system in
place and to the way of life brought about by global phenomena which
do not work anymore. These alternatives may be influenced by the
lessons learned from local cultural practices and experiences which
can influence positively global systems and help so-called modern
societies to question the political, economic and cultural ontology
of the present world order.

Specific themes:

- From a theoretical standpoint, a crucial step in highlighting the
link between globalization and minority experiences is probably the
formulation of a critique of globalization’s Eurocentric,
metropolitan philosophical bases. These theoretical tools, under
colonial rule, have participated in the physical destruction or
weakening of minority cultures worldwide. The philosophical bases
upon which Europeans relied to justify colonization (and which remain
today, for some, national treasures) are being seriously questioned
today by ethnic literatures (with, for example, the development of
Native American critical theories in the United States). This
international symposium can provide a platform for an overview of the
resistance literature in that rather theoretical area. It would be
interesting to see how traditional and modern ethnic philosophies
from around the world participate in the critique of dominant
theories, from various areas (politics, the economy, culture, etc.)
which have induced the development and endurance of globalization
processes, and how these other philosophies can participate in the
development of new political, economic, cultural practices that are
more democratic and thus beneficial to modern societies. This theme,
a matter of primary interest to ethnologists, should be explored from
cultural, socio-political and economic perspectives in a diversity of
geopolitical spaces.

- An important aspect of globalization has been, and still is, the
development of international law. Can this legislation and the
official international bodies that issue it (both the products of the
relationship between autochthonous Americans and European settlers,
the products of colonization) participate today in the
anti-globalization effort? Can it happen/is it happening thanks to
the influence of NGOs that defend the rights of native people around
the world and challenge the current colonialist international and
national legislation that defines (or refuses to define) indigenous
statuses) ? Can the law really be a carrier of change, equality,
prosperity for ethnic groups, and participate in the redefinition of
national and international priorities in terms of economic and
cultural governance.

- It would be useful to evaluate the current situation in terms of
the influence of globalization on ethnic groups around the world. We
will, of course, have to focus on specific geopolitical areas in the
Americas, Africa or the Pacific area, and look at how, depending on
the political and economic situation of the nations that "harbor"
them, minority groups have managed, with varying degrees of success,
to limit the effects of globalization on their culture--to live with
certain aspects of globalization, to take advantage of some and to
resist others. We won’t forget to mention native cultures that were
unable to resist global practices but can still teach us a lot about
the potentially annihilating aspects of globalization.

- As a follow-up to the previous paragraph/line of inquiry, it would
be interesting to study how contemporary ethnic writers root their
reflection on the future of their people into very practical problems
related to land, culture, the needs of their communities; how they
engage explicitly in analyzing the political, economic, cultural,
social realities of their communities; how this literature grounded
in land and territory can help national communities to develop
different modes of organization for modern societies. What values /
discourses / national and global practices (the two adjectives being
used interchangeably here since nations follow the methods of
governance dictated by international prerogatives and institutions)
are challenged by international ethnic literatures? How do these
literatures contribute to the reflection on the methods of resistance
to capitalist domination and a global value system based on profit?
What can studying social systems that offer different models of
community governance, a different organization of the economy and
land management which go against the concepts of privatization and
capitalization of human resources and land, contribute to this
reflection? How do these writers participate in the critique of
cultural capitalism, ideological hegemonies (the idea of a unique
cultural model) promoted by globalization? How can the instruments of
literary/cultural analysis qua global methodology of thinking (a
methodology known as “critical theory”) in the approach to texts can
benefit from and be articulated with other theories of being in the
world, so as to give birth to new forms of theories, new
methodologies of reading texts and cultures that are connected,
transcultural?

- What are the specific mediational strategies --that is to say
strategies that connect different perspectives, different views,
mainstream and “minor”, presented in various disciplines (sociology,
anthropology, history, etc.)—that bring to the attention of
mainstream culture these other discourses that seek to question the
ways in which global practices have homogenized our view of the
world, its values and representations?

- Etc.

Send your proposals before February 28, 2013 to Roxana Bauduin
([email protected]) et Sophie Croisy ([email protected])

The Symposium will take place at the University of Versailles
Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, Library auditorium, Vauban Boulevard,
Guyancourt, from the 19th to the 21st of June, 2013.

Participants can communicate in one of the three following languages:
English, French, Spanish.

If you want more information about this conference, you can check out
the website of the research group that organizes it (Laboratoire
SUDS, Université de Versailles) by clicking on the following link:
http://www.sudam.uvsq.fr/laboratoire-suds-d-ameriques-espaces-atlantiques-suds-/langue-fr/actualites/mondialisation-et-peuples-minorises-220834.kjsp


Contact:

Sophie Croisy, Conference Organiser
Laboratoire Suds d'Amériques
Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines
Bâtiment Vauban. Bureau 610
47, boulevard Vauban
F-78280 Guyancourt
France
Phone: +33 (0)1 39255692
Email: [email protected]
Web:
http://www.sudam.uvsq.fr/laboratoire-suds-d-ameriques-espaces-atlantiques-suds-/langue-fr/actualites/mondialisation-et-peuples-minorises-220834.kjsp




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