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Call for Papers

Theme: Intimacy and Belonging in Contemporary India
Type: International Conference
Institution: Indian Institute of Advanced Study (IIAS)
Location: Shimla, Himachal Pradesh (India)
Date: 4.–6.4.2016
Deadline: 8.11.2015

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The Latin etymology of the word ‘intimacy’ conveys the following
meaning: it is making known (intimare) what is innermost (intimus) to
a close friend (intima).Intimacy, thus, incorporates a notion of
sharing by acknowledging an urge of belonging together, almost
inseparably. The questions arise then:  Out of all that we develop,
how many are intimate relations for us? Out of all that we feel, how
many can be identified as the innermost feelings and how much of even
those can we express intimately in a familiar circle? The paradox of
intimacy lies in the fact that it is objective but personal, somatic
nonetheless psychological, affective in its dimension yet without
having a firm reflective/self-conscious foundation. Most importantly,
intimacy of the ‘self’ is dependent on ‘other’ and yet belonging
together in such a manner as if the sharp distinction between the
‘self’ and the ‘other’ is annihilated in an act of intimate
destruction. The notion of Intimacy thus proves that the ‘self’
cannot resist from belonging to the ‘other’. To be specific, the
‘self’ can only be known through the ‘other’, where it seems possible
that the innermost qualities can be shared. Here comes the question
of choice. Unlike the bond with and among the non-humans, intimate
bond among human beings depends on, firstly, the palpable possibility
of sharing and, secondly, on the mutual consensus and commitment of
belonging from both the parties. Is the tangibility of such
probability of intimacy purely apolitical? Are the motivations for
belonging, through closeness/ fidelity, fully impulsive sans politics?
What is the politics that drives us from the intimate awareness of
belonging-to (externally related) towards/against belonging-with
(related internally)? What is the politics that often adds an
esoteric dimension to intimacy?

Initially viewed as the ‘sociology of personal life’ as a part of the
discourse of everyday life, intimacy now has been recently melded
with the complex broader issues related to labour, economies, social
justice, commodification and body shopping. The possibility of
finding new ways of belonging together cannot be understood without
understanding the complex connection of intimacy with changing
notions of nationhood, citizenship and community. From the ancient
erotic practices of ‘shringara’ to ‘prem’, the armed debate on
valentines’ day to interreligious, interclass, intercaste romances/
marriages and their consequences, including shaming, stigmatizing  to
honour killing — all are symptomatic of the progress of intimacy in
Indian hands in new and newer forms.

 This conference, focusing on the emerging forms of intimacies in
contemporary India, is also an attempt to understand/address the
politics behind the changing notion/nature of belonging. What causes
or inhibits intimacy and what restricts or disfigures one’s identity
of belonging? Questions can be asked, if at all the transformation in
the modes of intimacies – resulting from transnational ties,
migration/ immigration, rise of alternative socio-economic
doctrines, new communication technologies and/or transnational media,
and thereby giving rise to intimate spaces/ intimate settings for
intimate encounters – have in actuality, paved way for transversal and
emancipatory structures that can politically challenge the hegemonic,
traditional, Indian concepts/ norms of belongings, erstwhile
restricted to the rigid boundaries of class, caste, religion, region
and  normative conformity.

Specifically, these are the questions we are asking: What are the
benefits and challenges of cross-cultural/unconventional/non-human
intimacies? What is/possibly be the politics of belonging if the
contemporary forms of intimacies ever attempt in the intersecting of
the issues related to geographical location/ethnicities, class, race,
disability, age, (dalit/tribal) subalternity,  (religious/gender and
sexual) minority and thereby aim at germinating alternative
sub-cultural praxes? Can one relate the emerging trends of belonging
in India with the concepts of intellectual intimacy, spiritual
intimacy and the intimacy of the past through memory? Is there an
essential politics behind the fusions of intimacy, commodification,
bodies, labour, care, and social justice? How can one apprehend the
politics and possibilities of the transformation from naming and
relating—like friend, companion, lover, partner, spouse—to
poly-amorous desires, dissident eroticism, anonymous/unnamed bonding
or even collective belonging in a temporal manner? How can one also
make sense of intimacy's paradoxes, such as domestic violence?

Papers are invited for presentation, related to any of the following
suggested themes:

- Emerging Trends of Intimacies as Political (membership;
  inclusion/exclusion), Economic (work and organizational life),
  Cultural (diverse symbolic anthropologies of experience), Personal
  (personally significant bonds and kinship) Belonging
- New Temporal and Spatial (Localities/Sites) Practices: Reconfigured
  Intimacies as Resistance to Traditional Hegemonic Control
- Democratisation of Intimate Relations as Emancipatory Belonging:
  Normative and Transgressive; Difference and Dissidence; Privileged
  and the Marginalized; Regular and  Irregular Practices in
  Connection with the ‘Other’ and the Abject
- Consumable Belongings/Consuming Intimacies: Bodies (erotic/
  outfits/ orientations/ fetishes/ tattoos/ donations/ Sale), Labour,
  Care and Social Justice/Welfare
- Intimacies, Technological/ Media Interventions and Modified
  Belongings: Identity, Anonymity, Vulnerability, Surveillance and the
  Emerging Alterities in Response
- State, Law and the Performativity/ Representation of Addictive/
  Contested/ Censored /Queer Intimacies in India: Citizenship,
  Nationality and Transcultural Cosmopolitan Rubrics

A limited number of participants will be invited for the Seminar.
Those interested in participating should send an abstract (500-700
words) of the proposed paper along with their C.V. to:

Dr. Kaustav Chakraborty, Fellow
Indian Institute of Advanced Study
Rashtrapati Nivas, Shimla- 171005
Tel: 0177-2832930 (Extn. 220): +91-8988051421 (Mobile)
Email: [email protected]
 
Shri Kamal Sharma, Academic Resource Officer
Indian Institute of Advanced Study
Rashtrapati Nivas, Shimla- 171005
Tel: 0177-2831385; +91-9418450024 (Mobile)
Email: [email protected]

The last date for submission of abstract (500-700 words) is 8
November, 2015. The date for short listing of participants is 15
November, 2015. The Institute intends to send Invitation letters to
selected participants by 25 November, 2015. It is the policy of the
Institute to publish the proceedings of the seminars it organizes.
Hence, all invited participants will be expected to submit complete
papers (6000-10000 words), hitherto unpublished and original, with
citations in place, along with a reference section, to the Academic
Resource Officer, Indian Institute of Advanced Study, Shimla – 171005
by 4 March, 2016. Style sheet for the submission of papers may be
downloaded from the IIAS website: http://www.iias.org/content/shss

IIAS, Shimla, will be glad to extend its hospitality during the
Seminar period and is willing to reimburse, if required, rail or air
travel expenses from the place of current residence in India, or the
port of arrival in India, and back.

Conference website:
http://www.iias.org/event/intimacy-and-belonging-contemporary-india




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