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Call for Papers

Theme: The West
Subtitle: Concept, Narrative, and Politics
Type: International Conference
Institution: Department of History and Ethnology, University of
Jyväskylä
Location: Jyväskylä (Finland)
Date: 8.–9.12.2016
Deadline: 31.8.2016

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What are, and have been, the shifting meanings of the West? Does the
West exist, and if so, how – in action, identity, politics, thought,
popular culture, imagination, rhetoric, and academic texts? 

During the past decade, we have witnessed a proliferation in studies
focusing on the West (or Western society/culture/countries/people).
These studies have discussed the West as a concept, narrative,
civilization, identity, unit in international relations, and as a
both real and imagined community. We have seen critical and
constructive studies, and the emergence of a still unsettled
framework called Occidentalism. 

And yet it seems that the idea of the West remains as elusive as
ever. Why certain geographical/political/cultural areas are called
the West, which countries or groups belong to the West, and what
socio-cultural elements make a society Western? Answers to these
questions appear to depend on the speaker and the discursive context.
Sometimes the concept refers to a certain geopolitical formation,
political system, values or ideologies; often it connotes to a high
level of technological development or scientific progress; at other
times it simply refers to the populations who are the richest and
consume the most. In the historical imagination, the Western world is
based on a series of interrelated phenomena including Christianity,
the Enlightenment, the scientific and industrial revolutions,
colonialism, and Cold War. Still, despite of it being fuzzy,
contested, and criticized, the concept of the West continues to be
current. It is evoked in a variety of situations all over the world
as a convenient shorthand expression taken for granted by both
speakers and listeners. 

The aim of this conference is not to repudiate the concept, nor to
produce conclusive definitions of it. Instead, we aim to problematize
the idea of the West even further, explore its functions, and thus to
enlarge our understanding of it. We also wish to bring together
researchers, united by their interest in the idea of the West, to
share their latest findings and thoughts. 

We welcome abstracts from all disciplines within human and social
sciences to discuss the past, present, and future of the idea of the
West. Possible topics for the papers include, but are not limited to: 

- International relations, politics, and geopolitics
- “Western” culture, society, tradition, history
- “Western” philosophy, science, rationalism
- “Western” values, morality, ideologies
- Christianity, neo-religions, New Age, secularism, atheism
- Capitalism, consumerism, socioeconomic West
- Racial, ethnic, minorities’ West
- “Western” modernity
- The West as an imagined community
- “Banal Occidentalism”
- Antipodal narratives, Orientalism/Occidentalism, “the West and the
  rest”
- Images/representations of the “West”, “Western countries”, or
  “Western people”
- How to study the West? Theories and methodologies 

Abstracts: 200–300 words, deadline August 31st, 2016.

Send your abstract with your name and affiliation to:
[email protected] 

Venue:
Agora Center, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland.

Participation fee: 40 €.

 
Contact:

Henna-Riikka Pennanen
Department of History and Ethnology
University of Jyväskylä
P.O. Box 35 (H)
FI-40014 Jyväskylä
Finland
Email: [email protected]
Web: https://thewestnetwork.wordpress.com




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