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Call for Papers

Theme: Negotiating the Borderlands
Subtitle: Identities and Encounters in the Liminal
Type: 11th Annual Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies Graduate
Student Conference and Workshop
Institution: University of New Mexico
Location: Albuquerque, NM (USA)
Date: 22.–23.3.2019
Deadline: 18.1.2019

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Mobility and displacement are elemental realities of our rapidly
changing world, forcing populations to migrate, leading to
potentially shifting identification and fluid forms of identity.
Conditions such as war, climate change, political oppression or
dissidence, and border conflicts are a hand full of the factors that
force populations to move. Motion sometimes incorporates ephemeral
experiences, such as refugee status, which although temporary, can be
formative of one’s identity. The prevalence of migration as a human
experience, and especially the current waves of migration,
necessitate a discussion of the permeability of borders and of their
physicality. Through the mixing of peoples’ personal perceptions, an
interrogation of political, geographical and cultural borders give a
new approach to the notion of identity. How do these real and
imagined movements and shifts shape identities? How can we
reinterpret borders to express the role they play in the formation
and transformation of identity? How might borders be understood
metaphorically as imagined spaces where interests and overlap and
compete?

We pose these questions specifically to fields pertaining to
literature, anthropology, cultural studies, digital humanities,
philosophy, art history, history, and sociology, but gladly welcome
submissions from all fields pertaining to the topic of the conference.

Possible session topics include but are not limited to:

- Identities and Displacement
- Border Crossing(s)
- Forces Shaping Identity
- Liminality and Gender
- Border Poetics
- Borders – Real and Figurative
- Colonization, post- & de-colonization
- Liminality from Ritual to Identity Discourses
- Diaspora in Media, Arts and Critique
- Bound(aries) & Transitional Spaces
- The Wall
- Language & Identity, Code-Switching
- Refugee Identities & Liminal Spaces
- Liminality and Politics

Conference Structure

This conference/workshop will be comprised of the keynote address and
panels on Friday, followed by additional panels on Saturday. Central
to the conference is a graduate seminar style workshop on Saturday.
This workshop is led by the keynote speaker and designed to explore
the issues presented and discussed in more detail and depth.
Presenters are requested to arrange their travel so that they can
participate in the entire event, including the workshop. There will
also be a closing reception Saturday evening, which is open to all
participants and audience members.

Please send a 500 word abstract along with a brief biographical
statement, in a separate document, to [email protected] by
January 18, 2019. Selected participants will be notified by January
25, 2019. Limited financial support to offset travel costs might be
available; please ask the conference organizers for more information.

Keynote lecture to be delivered by:
Dr. Claudia Sadowski-Smith, Arizona State University


Contact:

Jason Wilby
Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures
University of New Mexico
Ortega Hall Room 311
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001
USA
Email: [email protected]
Web:
http://fll.unm.edu/events/11th-annual-comparative-literature-and-cultural-studies-graduate-conference-and-workshop.html




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