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Call for Applications

Theme: Global Frontiers
Type: Interdisciplinary Winter School
Institution: Institute for Modern History, University of Tübingen
Location: Tübingen (Germany)
Date: 15.–17.11.2017
Deadline: 30.6.2017

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Concept

At the annual meeting of the American Historical Association in
Chicago on July 12, 1893, Frederick Jackson Turner announced the
closing of the United States frontier and "with its going … the first
period of American history." It was the unclaimed West, he argued,
that distinguished the nation's citizens from their European
ancestors, "strip[ping] off the garments of civilization and
array[ing] him in the hunting shirt and the moccasin." Now, for the
first time in four hundred years, its residents would need to find
something beyond "the stubborn American environment" to stimulate
their minds and promote their united character.

Despite — or perhaps because of — Turner's remarks, the idea of the
frontier has lingered in both popular and scholarly imaginations.
Frontier imagery shapes the stories we tell of medieval and early
modern European encounters with the Near East, indigenous resistance
movements during the 1800s and 1900s, twentieth-century German
imperialism, the global Space Race of the 1960s, and, most recently,
the PEGIDA movement and the refugee crises of 2015 and 2016. More
critically, the concept has pushed us to come to terms with different
types of boundaries (geographic, social, racial, ethnic, cultural,
etc.) as well as their effectiveness in dividing and uniting
populations.

This three-day intensive Winter School is aimed at Ph.D. students and
early postdoctorates working on the themes of borders, boundaries,
and frontiers with a focus on the fifteenth through twenty-first
centuries. It particularly aims to reunite the research of scholars
working on these concepts across disciplines, including but not
limited to the Arts, Anthropology, Ethnography, Geography, History,
Literature, and various Area Studies, and to promote participants'
sharing of their practical use of these frameworks in ways not
limited by historical periods or spaces.

We seek proposals for presentations of 20 to 25 minutes in length,
which explore demarcations, experiences, and imaginings of the
frontier around the globe. Papers may be theoretical in nature or may
assess the meanings of these ideas within specific communities.
Motivating questions might include:

- Can we define the frontier? Does this definition carry around the
  globe and across time?
- Who can claim the frontier?
- What is the role of nature along the frontier?
- Are frontiers best understood as zones of demarcation and
  separation (borders) or of social and cultural interaction
  (borderlands)?
- Are frontiers less — or even unmonitored spaces? Or are they,
  rather, spaces subject to particular efforts of regulation,
  disciplining, control, and surveillance — and, if so, by whom?
- What has been the relationship between the frontier and concepts of
  civility?
- How are frontiers imagined in times or regions distant from their
  actual occurrence?

Funding

The organizers will cover travel costs to/from Tübingen (up to an
agreed limit), accommodation and lunches for 10 successful
applicants, who will present on their current research projects. An
additional 10 individuals will be eligible to receive part-funding as
participants.

The working language of the school is English.

Application and Selection Procedure

The Winter School will offer financial assistance to a maximum of 20
participants. Those interested in joining the program should submit
the following documents by email to
globalfrontiers2...@histsem.uni-tuebingen.de:

- a brief CV (max. 2 pages)
- a title/abstract of the proposed presentation (max. 500 words)
- a cover letter placing the applicant's proposal within their larger
research project and identifying their motivations for participating
in the program (max. 2 pages)

All documents should be submitted in English, preferably as a single
PDF file.

The deadline for applications is Friday, 30 June 2017. Notifications
will be made in late July.

Questions can be directed to the conference email provided above or
to any of the organizers.

Organizers

Daniel Menning, University of Tübingen
daniel.menn...@uni-tuebingen.de

Kristin Condotta Lee, Washington University in St. Louis
condo...@wustl.edu

Tobias P. Graf, University of Tübingen/Heidelberg University
tobias-peter.g...@uni.tuebingen.de


Contact:

Global Frontiers Interdisciplinary Winter School
Email: globalfrontiers2...@histsem.uni-tuebingen.de
Web: https://www.uni-tuebingen.de/index.php?id=96422&L=1




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