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Call for Papers

Theme: The Postmigrant Condition
Subtitle: Art, Culture and Politics in Contemporary Europe
Type: International Conference
Institution: University of Southern Denmark
Location: Odense (Denmark)
Date: 22.–23.11.2018
Deadline: 24.8.2018

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Debates on migration and integration dominate most European societies
today, often generating polarization and strong antagonisms. In
recent years, the notion of ‘postmigrant societies’ – or, more
encompassing, the ‘postmigrant condition’ – has emerged as one
attempt to describe such conflicts and struggles. Sociologists
Juliane Karakayali and Vassilis S. Tsianos argue that the notion
‘postmigrant society’ refers to 

"...the political, cultural and social transformations of societies
with a history of post-colonial and guest worker immigration.... The
adjective postmigrant does not seek to historicize the fact of
migration, but rather describes a society structured by the
experience of migration — which is also relevant for all current
forms of immigration (such as flight, temporary migration), both
politically, legally and socially."

In this respect, the notion of postmigration or postmigrant society
seeks to develop a new perspective on transformations caused by
migration, including the obsession in contemporary societies with
migration and integration and the new forms of exclusion and new
nationalisms that follow. At the same time, it also seeks to overcome
binary distinctions between the migrant/non-migrant and to challenge
the ‘demarcation-line between migration and non-migration’ (Naika
Foroutan).

To begin with, the term ‘postmigration’ derives not from academic
scholars or researchers, originates in artist circles in Berlin where
theater director Shermin Langhoff, among others, successfully began
to refer to their work as ‘postmigrant theater’. More and more
artists, intellectuals and activists began to refuse to be made into
simple objects of national ‘integration’-politics with labels like
‘guest workers’, ‘migrants’, ‘foreigners’ or ‘immigrants’. Instead
they would insist on the overall plurality of life-stories and
backgrounds as a fundamental condition of modern society and the
social and cultural interaction among all its members. In academic
research the term is often employed as a new perspective on migration
and its consequences, contributing to a ‘radical questioning but of
the conventional view on migration’, according to sociologist Erol
Yildiz. In this reading, postmigration describes ‘the re-narration
and re-interpretation of the phenomenon “migration” and its
consequences’. 

At the conference we want to examine this new concept in relation to
the arts, culture and politics – and compare its validity in
different European societies. In which way, we ask, do the notion of
a ‘postmigrant society’ and the idea of a ‘postmigrant perspective’
contribute to the overall attempts to comprehend and describe the
ongoing struggles and conflicts unfolding in European societies? What
roles do art and culture play in recent sociocultural negotiations
(of e.g. identities, belongings and participation)? How do art and
culture depict contemporary forms of exclusion and mechanisms of
racism, and how can art and culture contribute to the difficult tasks
of overcoming persistent forms of nationalism and racism? Can we
describe a ‘postmigrant aesthetic’ (Myriam Geiser)?

For the conference we invite papers addressing some of these
questions. We also welcome methodological discussions of the new
terminology and its possibilities and impacts. Contributions that
want to explore contemporary European artistic and cultural
expressions (including literature, film, theatre and art) which
address the issues and consequences of the postmigrant condition are
very welcome, as well as discussions on concepts linked to the
postmigrant condition like othering, belonging, participation,
racism, nationalism, diversity, intersectionality, integration and
transnationalism. As a supplementary perspective, we also want to
invite papers dealing with the challenges that cultural institutions
such as museums and galleries are confronted with in relation to the
postmigrant condition.

We therefore invite proposals for papers of 20 minutes, addressing
general questions such as (but not limited to): 

- What are the differences and similarities in various European
countries in relation to the postmigrant condition, and how can those
similarities and differences be explained and described? 

- How can art, culture and academia reflect the ‘postmigrant
condition’ and its inherent struggles and conflicts – and how may we
conceive of the similarities and differences across European
societies? 

- How can art and culture contribute to a better understanding of the
conflicts and struggles that take place in the postmigration
condition, and how can they develop strategies for political impact
in response to the contemporary challenges and conflicts that
influence European societies?

- Is it possible to identify specific (trans-)national genres of e.g.
postmigrant literature, art and film; and, if so, how can we describe
those genres and their ‘postmigrant aesthetics’? 

- How do concepts from migration studies like ‘identity’,
‘multiculturalism’, ‘transnationalism’, ‘othering’, ‘race’,
‘belonging’, ‘integration’, ‘difference’, ‘border politics’ and
‘hybridity’ change and come to work in new ways in a postmigrant
perspective?

- How does the term postmigration relate to other ‘-posts’:
post-other, post-ethnic, post-race, post-national and post-colonial?

- In which ways do postmigrant perspectives change our focus on
memory, heritage and national self-understanding? And how does
postmigration affect the production of national narratives? 

- How does postmigrant theory offer new analytical perspectives on
readings of art, film, theatre and literature (etc.)?

- What are the pitfalls and problems related to the new terminology
and what kind of problems do we face when operationalizing
postmigrant theory?

- How does postmigrant theory relate to and affect discussions on
cultural citizenship, mulitlinguality as well as the study of
diversity policies in cultural institutions and problems of
representation and visibility? 

Keynote participants include (among others) Naika Foroutan, Erol
Yildiz, Riem Spielhaus, Roger Bromley and Marsha Meskimmon. 

Please send short proposals for papers (no longer than 350 words) and
a short bio (150 words) no later than 24 August 2018 to Anna Meera
Gaonkar ([email protected]).

Conference fee: 150 Euros for members of academic institutions.
The conference is free for artists, students and independent scholars,
but you will have to register on the conference homepage.

The conference is part of the collaborative research project, “Art,
Culture and Politics in the ‘Postmigrant Condition’”, funded by the
Independent Research Fund Denmark (see: www.sdu.dk/en/postmigration).
The conference is organized by Moritz Schramm, Sten Moslund, Anna
Meera Gaonkar and Hans Christian Post.

For questions contact Moritz Schramm ([email protected]) or Anna Meera
Gaonkar ([email protected]).

Conference website:
https://www.sdu.dk/en/om_sdu/institutter_centre/ikv/konferencer+og+seminarer/2018-postmigrantcondition




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