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Call for Papers

Theme: Home
Type: 5th Annual Postgraduate Conference
Institution: Society for Comparative Cultural Inquiry, University
College London (UCL), University of London
Location: London (United Kingdom)
Date: 26.–27.10.2017
Deadline: 21.7.2017

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‘It is part of morality not to be at home in one’s home’ wrote
Theodor Adorno in Minima Moralia.

For Adorno, dwelling was impossible and the private life indecent
following the violence of twentieth century totalitarianism and the
rise of capitalist consumer culture. At the same time, Hannah Arendt
distinguished the public life of the polis, characterised by speech
and action, from the private life of the oikos, related to labour,
the domestic and the body, or what Arendt termed the ‘dark background
of mere givenness’. Historic and ongoing feminist struggles over
housework and wages have exposed the political stakes of precisely
this ‘background’. Indeed, the contemporary significance of the home,
and homelessness, is acutely apparent at both a local and global
level.

So, what is it to be at home and what does one have when one has a
home? Home is a space of rest and refuge, but also a place of
discomfort and disquiet. If there is home then there is also the
unheimlich, the uncanny element that, like Kafka’s Odradek, unsettles
any intimacy. Home is where we recover when we are ill, and when we
are not home we get homesick. We associate home with security and
sanctity, but to be at home is not necessarily to be free from
violence, intrusion or oppression. It may even be because home is
imagined as an apolitical place that ideology is able to take root in
it.

This interdisciplinary conference invites 15-20 minute papers from
all disciplines that explore the concept of ‘home’ as a site of
contention, transformation and social reproduction, as a space in
which different forms of agency are both made and revoked. Questions
papers might like to consider are: How is home imagined and to what
ends is it evoked? How are the thresholds of privacy regulated, and
to whose exclusion? Is home in crisis? How might we re-imagine or
re-work the home?

Proposals for panels, performances, installations and workshops are
also welcome, as well as creative critical work. Topics could include
but are not restricted to: 

Proposals for panels, performances, installations and workshops are
also welcome, as well as creative critical work. Topics could include
but are not restricted to: 

- Philosophical approaches to home: ethics, ontology, the
  "philosopher at home"
- The nation as home: nationalisms, sovereignty, postcolonialism,
  liberation struggles
- Gender and sexuality at home: family, domestic and affective
  labour, the public/private divide, power dynamics
- Refuge, exile, migration, displacement, diaspora
- Representations of the home in film, theatre, television, literature
- Architecture of the home: experimentation, innovative solutions to
  changing lifestyles
- The place of home in different religious faiths and practices
- Capital at home: contemporary politics and economics,
  gentrification, the housing crisis, austerity, Occupy, homelessness
- Academic homes/homelessness in interdisciplinary work
- Historical and cultural specificities: the changing nature and
  understanding of the home across time and cultures (e.g. in
  Antiquity, the Early Modern period, the Victorian period)
- Psychology and affect of/at home: boredom, claustrophobia,
  loneliness
- Care/Health at home: adapting homes for disabled people, end of
  life care
- Alternative homes: institutions (prisons, hospitals, care homes),
  communes, kibbutzim, squats, foster homes, nomadism

We invite submissions from all disciplines, including but not limited
to:
Anthropology; Sociology; Gender studies; Architecture and Town
Planning; Literature; Critical theory; Film Studies; Photography;
Politics and political theory; Economics; History; Modern Languages;
Philosophy; Art; Psychology and Psychoanalysis; Cultural Studies;
Translation Studies; Health and Medical Humanities.

Please send abstracts of no more than 300 words, plus 5 key words and
a short biographical statement (50 words), by Friday 21st July, to:
[email protected]




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