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Call for Papers

Theme: De/Colonization in the Americas
Subtitle: Continuity and Change
Type: 3rd Biennial Conference
Institution: International Association of Inter-American Studies
   Pontíficia Universidad Católica del Perú
Location: Lima (Peru)
Date: 6.–8.8.2014
Deadline: 15.10.2013

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The Americas have a long history of colonialism; even the concepts
‘America’ and ‘Americanity’ date back to European expansion, invasion
and conquest. As the success of the term ‘postcolonialism’ suggests,
the colonial legacy is a relic of the past that is continuously
rearticulated and reactivated until today.

In the Americas, colonialism informs nearly all aspects of life. From
European invasion onward it established a durable matrix of power
based on gender relations, racism and ethnic classifications that
defined white and criollo male superiority over the indigenous and
‘Afro American’ as well as over Asian, Jewish, Arabic, Muslim and
Hindu populations, peoples and nations, in spite of the ambiguity of
ethnic and racial frontiers. Moreover, in recent times, the thrust to
decolonize has become a major aspiration that implies the rescue and
re-evaluation of native and subordinated cultures.

In this sense the battles for recognition and self-determination of
disenfranchised groups in the Americas demonstrate the overwhelming
burden of colonialism and its connection to gender, ethnicity,
racism, and class hierarchies. The state reacted with special
procedures of ethnic administration such as exclusion through
reservations, haciendas, and slums, or politics of forced inclusion
in terms of forced homogenization and assimilation. Recently emerged
new politics of recognition have led to a redefinition of
nation-states as pluricultural or even plurinational.

Colonialism has deeply informed cultural production and popular
culture in the Americas. Jazz, blues, rock music and hip-hop have
given voice to the experience of ethnic and racial exclusion and
Latin America’s boom literature is informed by ‘magic’
indigenous-colonial cosmovisions. Ethnic and racial struggles against
quota systems and/or auto-ethnographic media productions are integral
parts of the fight against the negative aspects of the colonial
legacy. Thus, colonialism is not only a historical burden for
American societies but also represents an uneven syncretism that must
be deconstructed. The linguistic aspects of colonialism resonate in a
high degree of exterminated and endangered autochthonous languages
but also in the creation of creôle languages and techniques of
code-switching.

Colonialism contains important material aspects as concerns the
appropriation, reappropriation and redistribution of land,
commodities as well as work force and citizenshipregimes. From early
colonial land-taking to internal colonialism and imperial politics to
the recent forms of neo-extractivism the colonization of space and
nature has been an integral part of colonial and postcolonial
projects.

The conference will adopt a broad concept of colonialism, which
refers not to a single historical period but to a relational mode
that creates asymmetric power relations and modes of exploitation.
This cross-disciplinary forum of academic exchange invites
contributions from all academic disciplines concerned with
colonialism in the Americas. It will examine colonization,
colonialism, nation building, decolonization, and continuing facets
of coloniality as they relate to societies, politics, economy,
cultures, and media. The participation of doctoral students is
strongly encouraged. Scholars are invited to propose presentations
and/or panels on a wide variety of topics including:

Please send proposals for individual papers or for panels with a
chairperson and 3 to 5 presentations to: [email protected]

Please include your name, the title of presentation and/or panel, an
abstract (200-400 words per presentation) and email addresses.
Presentations can be held in English or in Spanish. The deadline for
submissions is October 15, 2013.

Host:
Gonzalo Portocarrero (Pontíficia Universidad Católica del Perú, Peru)

Organizing Committee:
María Herrera-Sobek (UC Santa Barbara, USA)
Olaf Kaltmeier (Bielefeld University, Germany)
Heidrun Moertl (University of Graz, Austria)


Contact:

Organizing Committee of the 3rd Biennial Conference
International Association of Inter-American Studies
Email: [email protected] Visit
Web: http://www.interamericanstudies.net/?page_id=4269




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