__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Borders, Territories, Spaces of the Sinophone World
Type: 2nd Sinophone Studies in Europe and the Americas (SEA)
International Young Scholars Conference
Institution: Research Center for Chinese Cultural Subjectivity (CCS),
National Chengchi University
Location: Taipei (Taiwan) – Online
Date: 24.–26.3.2022
Deadline: 15.8.2021

__________________________________________________


The Research Center for Chinese Cultural Subjectivity in Taiwan (CCS)
will be hosting the 2nd Sinophone Studies in Europe and the Americas
(SEA) International Young Scholars Conference in March 2022 at
National Chengchi University, Taiwan. The conference will take place
simultaneously online and face-to-face in Taipei, for those who are
able to come to Taiwan. We invite post-doctoral researcher, Ph. D.
candidate, doctoral or master’s degree student in all related fields
to discuss different research approaches with their Taiwanese
counterparts. We hope to provide an opportunity to discover new
research horizons and to develop international approaches to
transcultural and interdisciplinary research.

The goal of the SEA 2022 conference is to re-think existing paradigms
in fields and sub-fields like Asian Studies, Sinology, Transcultural
Studies, Religion Studies, Applied Ethics, Comparative Literature and
Philosophy, History of Thought, Global History, Digital Humanities,
etc. One central question that we want to explore is how to
understand the idea of (geographic, linguistic, conceptual) “border”
in the global present, and how different Sinophone perspectives
interrogate this and other related ideas, in particular with regard
to the following topics:

- Categories and Boundaries in Transcultural Perspective
- Inclusivity and Demarcation in Sinophone Religions
- Sinophone Studies in Practical Horizon

We especially encourage submissions of Digital Humanities projects
concerning these three areas.


Core Topics

1. Categories and Boundaries in Transcultural Perspective

How do Sinophone philosophy, literature, historical research, and
artistic practices define borders? How do different schools of
thought, artistic movements and authors in the Chinese
speaking/writing traditions define and put into question boundaries
(categorical, disciplinary, territorial, cultural, political…)? Are
there categorial systems, classificatory concepts, and typological
constructions specific to the Sinophone world? How do they deal with
distinctions such as “body/soul”, “life/death”,”inside/outside”,
“nation/empire”, “subject/structure”, “civilization/barbarism”, etc.?
Do they differ from other models of “bordering”, past and present,
East and West?

On the other hand, isn’t the act of comparing a way of creating new
boundaries? Or should we rather say that categorial limits are
transformed and redefined through the exposure to other models and
the development of transcultural patterns of thought? Do current
trends in Sinophone and transcultural thinking blur the lines between
traditional borders, creating new territories for thought and
inventing new approaches to space? Or do they rather produce new
boundaries, such as the unattainable otherness of a certain idea of
“China” or a certain idea of the “West”? Isn’t the increasing global
interest in Chinese thought the symptom of a paradoxical double
desire—the desire to break existing barriers in the direction of a
certain cosmopolitan pluralism, but also the desire to reenact
borders within a globalized style of thought that fetishizes cultural
differences?

2. Inclusivity and Demarcation in Sinophone Religions

From the Three Religion Syncretism 三教合一 of Buddhism, Daoism and
Confucianism, to the Five Religion Syncretism 五教合一 in
contemporary groups such as Yiguandao 一貫道 and Dejiaohui 得教會,
religion on China and Sinophone communities has a long tradition of
being inclusive of diverging religious worldviews and seeing
underlying unity within sometimes opposing belief systems. At the
same time, proponents of various religious schools often sought to
differentiate themselves from other traditions, reaffirm the
supremacy of their own teachings and vie with each other for
believers. Governments on occasion also heavily influenced individual
beliefs and practices, such as occasional bans on slaughter and
fishing related to Buddhist beliefs during the Sui and Tang
dynasties, Ming emperor Hongwu 洪武 giving implicit permission to
promote syncretism by penning the Treatise on the Three Religions
《三教論》, and state atheism in the People’s Republic of China.
Sinophone diaspora communities nowadays can be found in states both
with and without state religion, meeting different levels of
tolerance.

For this conference we invite papers dealing with movements,
historical developments of and discourses about both inclusivity and
demarcation in Sinophone religions and how such tendencies pertain to
questions of identity for believers. Topics may include (1)
developments within the Sinosphere as well as (2) contact of
Sinophone with inbound religions such as Buddhism, Islam or
Christianity or (3) the interactions of the Sinophone diaspora with
the religions of their new home countries.

3. Sinophone Studies in Practical Horizon

The development of Sinophone studies in practical horizon requires us
to go back to the immediate experience of the life worlds. It also
invites us to take into account the dynamics of culturing (instead of
just traditional culture). The Sinophone worlds are not mere
geographic territories, on the contrary, their borders are blurred:
they include experiences from the plural dimensions of multiple life
worlds. The different Sinophone life worlds integrate and interfere
with one another, constantly producing new cultural features.

As Christian Norberg-Schulz’s “Spirit of Place” points out, we cannot
limit the concept of “place” to geographic space, since it also
indicates the history and meaning of communities living in a given
place/space. In the practical field, ethical life is the occurrence
of spiritual features and meanings, rather than just their
manifestation. The SEA 2022 Conference invites contributions that put
in contrast multiple aspects of the ethical life in the Sinophone
world, in order to disclose the plurality of its cultural features.


Submissions

This call is open to every graduate student, Ph. D. candidate and
postdoctoral researcher with an interest in the fields of Sinophone
and Chinese studies. We encourage the development of new research
topics and approaches to these fields, as well as to promote dialogue
and collaboration between young scholars from Europe, the Americas
and Asia.

To submit an abstract, the following criteria must be met:

- Submitter should be post-doctoral researcher, Ph. D. candidate,
  doctoral or master’s degree student.
- Abstract and full paper can be written in English or Chinese. If
  written in Chinese, the submitter will need to provide a briefing of
  the full paper in English. Presentations in Chinese are preferable,
  but not required.
- Research and/or studies must fit into one of the Core Topics.

Submission link:
https://forms.gle/j54SyLsTVHvgpCaT6

Contact E-mail:
nccu...@gmail.com

You will receive a confirmation email if your abstract is received.
After the review by CCS, authors will be notified about results by
30th September 2021. If the abstract is accepted, the author will
need to submit full paper before 28th February 2022.


Important dates

- Deadline for Abstract: 15th August 2021
- Notification of Abstract: 30th September 2021
- Submission Date of Full Paper: 28th February 2022
- The Proceedings will be published around August 2022.


Conference website:
http://epaper.ccstw.nccu.edu.tw/news/2022-sea-international-young-scholars-conference/





__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
https://interphil.polylog.org

InterPhil List Archive:
https://www.mail-archive.com/interphil@list.polylog.org/

__________________________________________________

Reply via email to