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Call for Papers

Theme: Justice
Type: 2019 PSA Convention
Institution: Postcolonial Studies Association (PSA)
   University of Manchester
Location: Manchester (United Kingdom)
Date: 11.–13.9.2019
Deadline: 28.1.2019

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Paper and panel proposals are invited from academics, scholars and
postgraduates as well as community organisers and activists with
interests in any area of postcolonial studies from any disciplinary,
cross- or interdisciplinary perspective and practice.

The Special Topic of the 2019 Convention is Justice.

Proposals for panels and papers on this theme are particularly
encouraged.

For all their differences, it might be said that postcolonialists are
united in their commitment to pursuing justice in the face of all the
destructive social, political, religious, cultural and environmental
consequences of imperialism. Given the thematic, disciplinary,
methodological, and idiomatic breadth of the postcolonial field,
though, ‘justice’ is marked by many different, often competing
conceptions – cognitive, epistemic, restorative, transitional,
socialist, cosmopolitan. Moreover, complex discourses around the
‘rights’ on which we might base notions of justice have opened up
questions of whose rights should predominate, who should articulate
rights and for whom?

In recent years, global debates have opened up about how to properly
understand imperialism, past and present, which has had wider
implications for how to understand agency and freedom – not just in
the context of imperious epistemologies, but also imperialist
economic, political, and legal structures. The 2019 convention will
extend this debate to the notion of justice and seeks contributions
that explore (but are not limited to) some of the following questions:

- Is it possible to articulate the many different kinds of justice
  pursued by postcolonialist interests under one overarching goal, or
  is there value in a plurality of competing ideas of justice – in
  speaking of justices?
- What form of justice(s) should postcolonialists pursue?
- Are some kinds of justice preferable to others?
- How do postcolonial considerations of justice intersect with those
  in other disciplines or areas such as disability studies, queerness,
  feminism, indigeneity, religion and so on?
- What does justice look like when fully achieved/put into practice?
- What questions of ethics and care arise in considering justice?
- How are notions of postcolonial justice inflected by the posthuman
  and the non-human?
- What historical and contemporary contexts of justice need to be
  considered?
- When is justice and repair impossible or undesirable?

Abstracts of 300 words (max) for 20-minute single or co-authored
presentations and 500 words (max) for panels or roundtables should be
sent as an attachment to:
[email protected]

Please include a brief biographical note of participants (2-3
sentences max).

We welcome presentations in any format.

The deadline for the receipt of abstracts is Monday 28 January 2019.

Please direct all enquiries to Helen Cousins, Chair of the Convention
Committee.

Keynote speakers:

David Theo Goldberg (University of California, Irvine)
Pablo Mukherjee (University of Warwick)
Nayanika Mookherjee (Durham University)


Contact:

Helen Cousins, Chair of the Convention Committee
Email: [email protected]
Web:
http://www.postcolonialstudiesassociation.co.uk/2019-psa-convention/




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