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Call for Papers

Theme: Margins and Connections
Type: Young Scholars International Conference
Institution: School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University
Location: New Delhi (India)
Date: 7.–8.2.2019
Deadline: 21.7.2018

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Margins are not mere physical outlying areas, or geographies at the
edges of state, capital and socio-cultural worlds. They are products
of various complex processes in colonial and postcolonial times and
have been produced in various moments of contestations,
fragmentations and negotiations. As such, margins are not inert
spaces; they are active sites in which creative practices and
connections have taken place. Such practices and connections include
cultures, politics, histories, societies, and economies that inhabit
either the border of a state or a “geo-body.” In this regard, various
studies focusing on “margins” have enabled us to look at forms of
state-making, subject formations, role of capital, circuits and
networks, contestations and subversions, including various cultural
and political practices across societies and boundaries.

Historically, “margins” such as North East India had connections with
societies in the “margins” of neighbouring areas such as Nepal,
Bhutan, Tibet, China, Myanmar, Bangladesh, etc. As such, these
geographical spaces throw up comparable and significant insights in
studying the making of such complex spaces. For instance, these
geographies are sites and spaces of various forms of material and
non-material transactions and connectivities, including resources,
rituals and commodities.

Such transactions and connectivities continue to mark these spaces
even in the contemporary times. People continue to have wider social,
cultural and (in) formal economic networks, marked by routes and
infrastructures that support various forms of mobility. These
“margins” have also been sites and spaces where forms of
state/non-state violence, contestations, projects of nation-building
and developmental interventions of both state and global financial
institutions simultaneously have coexisted. This has also included
representing these “margins” as the “gateways” and “corridors” of
capital, trade and services under the neoliberal economy.
Nevertheless, these areas have also been marked by various forms of
social and political movements, that resists and negotiates violence
and developmental interventions.

Some of the broad concerns and issues that emerge from the above are,
what are margins? In what context are margins produced and
reproduced? How are margins connected to the wider processes of
state, capital and cultural flows? What are the different ways
through which societies respond to the shifting dynamics of margin
making?

This two-day interdisciplinary international conference seeks to
explore some of these issues and concerns, especially focusing on
North East India and its neighbouring areas such Nepal, Bhutan,
Tibet, China, Myanmar, Bangladesh, etc. This conference focuses on
the following themes, but are not limited to:

- Making state, making margins
- Circuits, networks and infrastructures
- Capital, resource regimes and economy
- Margins and everyday life
- Violence, resistance and margins
- Knowledge, power and practices
- Margins and governance
- Movement and mobility
- Development, ecology and margins
- Memory and narratives
- Margins and gender
- Material culture

Interested research scholars, post-doctoral scholars and early career
academics are invited to submit an abstract of about 200-300 words,
including a brief CV at: neispyoungscholarsconfere...@gmail.com

Participants from outside India are requested to seek funding from
their institutions for travel costs. Partial funding to cover travel
costs may be available for selected participants from within India
based on availability of funds. Accommodation and local conveyance
will be provided for selected participants.

Important dates:

Last date for abstract submission:
21 July, 2018

Intimation of abstract acceptance:
17 August, 2018

Submission of working papers from selected participants:
7 January, 2019

Organizing Team:

G. Amarjit Sharma is Assistant Professor at North East India Studies
Programme, School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University,
New Delhi.

Bhumika R, Thingminao Horam, Tammoy  Das and Robert Lunkhopao Haokip
are Research Scholars at North East India Studies Programme, School
of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi.


Contact:

G. Amarjit Sharma, Assistant Professor
North East India Studies Programme
School of Social Sciences
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi
India
Email: neispyoungscholarsconfere...@gmail.com




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