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Call for Papers

Theme: Imperial Reverb
Subtitle: Exploring the Postcolonies of Communism
Type: Princeton Conjunction 2016
Institution: Program in Russian, East European, and Eurasian Studies,
Princeton University
Location: Princeton, NJ (USA)
Date: 13.–15.5.2016
Deadline: 20.1.2016

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In a 2001 issue of the journal PMLA, David Chioni Moore asked: “Is
the Post- in Postcolonial the Post- in Post-Soviet?” Answers to this
important question have come in many forms during the last fifteen
years, and the tentative equation between the two has also been
significantly extended: post-Soviet and postcolonial are routinely
lumped together with postmodernist, and post-totalitarian; just as
the “soviet” has with the “colonial.” Yet these “posts” did not sit
comfortably together; their apparent family resemblance has not yet
merged into a productive and convincing framework either for
analyzing socialism as a form of colonial practice or for
understanding post-soviet as post-colonial.

This interdisciplinary conference aims to review successes and
failures of the dialogue between the postcolonial theory and
postcommunist studies, which has been taking place in the former
socialist countries. We invite scholars to approach the alleged
postcolonial condition of postcommunist Europe and Eurasia not only
as a break from the colonial past, but also as a method of
retrospective reflection, and a form of an intellectual exchange.  To
what extent can postcolonial studies of the communist experiment be
seen as a product of intellectual transfer or conceptual mimicry? Do
those studies merely graft the postcolonial argumentation and
narration developed for the diverse cases of South Asia, Latin
America, or South Africa onto the no less diverse traditions,
experiences, and concerns of postcommuinist societies? Given the
impact that Marxism in general and the work of Antonio Gramsci in
particular had on the formation of postcolonial theory, how should we
interpret the wholesale rejection of the leftist legacy by
postcolonial scholarship in the region? Why do the anticolonial
studies produced in, and of the region tend to privilege the history
of the national elites, marginalizing even further the experience of
the colonized and the suppressed?  What are the analytical and
interpretive benefits and pitfalls of postcolonial anti-communism
that has been emerging gradually after the collapse of communism?
Will political conservatism, aesthetic traditionalism, and romantic
nationalism remain the key contributions of this anti-communist
postcoloniality?   

We encourage theoretically rigorous submissions that scrutinize the
history of intellectual exchanges between different sites of
postcolonial thinking worldwide, and the approaches, methods, and
concepts that emerge in the spaces of postsocialism. In particular,
we are interested in examining those points of conceptual divergence
and conceptual intersection between the postcolonial and
postcommunist studies deriving from the different forms of inequality
that industrial capitalism and state socialism produced. Did these
two forms of socio-political and economic organization create
comparable configurations of (post)coloniality, with similar
structures of colonial subjection and anti-colonial resistance?  Or,
were there distinctively socialist genealogies of subalternity that
the processes of radical economic modernization in the USSR and the
socialist bloc created? Which narratives and voices were
strategically excluded during the formation of the allegedly
classless society of socialist countries? Which narratives and voices
have been strategically excluded now, as postsocialist states undergo
rapid nationalization? Could we find the same dynamic of “domination
without hegemony,” as Ranajit Guha discerned in the case of colonial
India, or was the asymmetry of power between the “colonial” and
“imperial” elites negotiated differently under/after socialism?

We welcome historically grounded and ethnographically engaged
submissions from scholars interested in analyzing the postcolonial
transfiguration of the communist past. Please send your abstract (300
words) and a short CV (up to 2 pages) to Serguei Oushakine, the Chair
of the Program Committee at [email protected] by
January 20, 2016.

Those selected to give presentations at the conference will be
contacted in early February 2016. Final papers will be due no later
than April 15, and they will be posted on the conference website.

Pending funding, subsidies for graduate students and participants
from the overseas may be available.

The program committee:

Serguei Oushakine, Chair (Princeton)
Tarik Cyril Amar (Columbia)
Edyta Bojanowska (Rutgers)
Michael Kunichika (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton)
Ekaterina Pravilova (Princeton)

The annual conference is organized by the Program in Russian, East
European, and Eurasian Studies and made possible by the generous
funding from Princeton’s institutions.


Contact: 

Serguei Oushakine
Institute for International and Regional Studies
Princeton University
249 East Pyne
Princeton, NJ 08544
USA
Email: [email protected]
Web: https://imperialreverb.princeton.edu




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