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Call for Papers

Theme: Other Times, Other Spaces
Type: International Conference
Institution: Department of English, University of Carthage
Location: Tunis (Tunisia)
Date: 16.–17.3.2022
Deadline: 25.12.2021

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As philosophical concepts, time and space are earthbound and
imperfect (Deleuze&Guattari, 1994). As products of the human mind,
they are historical; their explanatory or revelatory power when
worked into theory — literary, historical or political — is tied to
their timeliness, to whether they are adequate to the historical
moment that brought them into being. The conference, “Other Times,
Other Spaces», explores the changeability of these concepts and their
effects in and out of the world. What insightsdoes current
astrophysical research (Hawking, 1988) bring to the field of human
and social sciences?

The late 20th century foregrounded new concepts of space. Arguing for
a balance between “critical spatial, historical, and social
thinking,” Bakhtin had demonstrated that human experiences were
‘chronotopic’, the materialization of “time” in “space”. In The
Production of Space, Henry Lefebvre argued that space is neither a
natural geography nor an empty container filled by history. It is
rather something that human beings produce over time. Building on
this concept, Edward Soja, called for a similar balanced dialectics
between space and time, as well as geography and history, creating
thus a novel and different way of thinking these concepts, as a more
balanced “triple dialectic,” known as “third space” (1996). Edward
Said reconceptualized space in Orientalism (1978) and V.Y. Mudimbe in
The Invention of Africa (1988). In Borderlands/ La Frontera (1987),
Chicana Gloria Anzulduamade borderes the center of space; Bell Hooks’
opened up the ‘gaps’ that ‘make space for oppositional practices’ in
‘Postmodern Blackness’. (1990)

In the 21st century, many theorists foreground space and time in
motion: David Damrosch’s What is World Literature (2000) explores
circulation; Sanjay Subrahmanyam writes about networks of ‘connected
histories.’ In The New Time and Space (2015), John Potts
revolutionizes the spatial-temporal dialectics by opening it to the
current advances in communication technologies which are transforming
“the way we understand and experience time and space.” In this age of
complex networks and virtual communication, our traditional
conceptions of time and space have been radically modified, creating
as Potts argues, virtual paradigms wherein time becomes a “montage of
fractures” and geographical/ physical space turns into a virtual
world.

This technical revolution has immensely impacted human cognitive
capacities and roles. Social communication has shifted from the
traditional conviviality of coffee-shops to cold cyber cafés muted by
digitalization of human relations, but alive and intense in online
communities. Artist Cristoph Büchel’s Venice Biennial Barca Nostra
(2019) brings us out of virtual circulation to the real space of
contemporary migration with its sustained tension between the free
mobility ideal and the lived reality of camouflaged “legalized”
restrictions, and the scandalous dramas at sea and beyond. A monument
some 1,1000 migrants who died trapped in the hold of this Libyan
fishing boat, bringing the recovered wreck into the museum caused
outrage and praise. For too many migrants circling the globe, the
border they cross is death.

“Other times, Other Spaces” explores history (time and space) as
something in constant transition, something in the making here and
now. The world has witnessed wars, pandemics, and natural and
man-made disasters. Today, we are more than ever threatened by
climate change, depletion of resources, devastating pandemics, and
disparities between the rich and the poor, North and South and West
and East. The fears of the past are haunting the present, our here
and now. Radical transformations are taking place across the world.
Human relations are atomized, fragmented, alienated, and yet,
paradoxically, consolidated by disasters and calamities such as the
current Covid-19 pandemic. As a result, our perceptions of the world
and humanity are being rethought and reshaped every day.

The conference seeks interdisciplinary contributions that investigate
human experiences of other times and other spaces which are addressed
in literature, history, culture studies and linguistics. The
conference puts particular emphasis on the otherness of space and
time. Papers on marginal histories and marginal spaces are
encouraged. Some questions arise: Is utopian thought in crisis in
modern times? Is dystopia looming large after the triumph of late
capitalism and collapse of communism? Did human relations turn into
cold cybernetic transactions? Have physical and historical realities
been turned into simulacra, into virtual or hyper-real ones? Does the
physical world imitate the virtual one or is it the other way around?
Is poetic imagination still valid in a world dominated by late
capitalist ethos? What role is left for art today? Can we still talk
about overlapping geographies? Can we still believe in common
destinies?


Topics

We encourage scholarly papers on the topic of “Other Times, Other
Spaces,” focusing on the following areas, but without being limited
to them:

- Global (dis-)orientations and dislocations
- Imagining the future: Chronotope of dystopias, and utopias
- On pandemics, wars, and disasters
- Climate change and migration
- Cyber realities: cyber surveillance, cyber criminality, cyber love
- Thinking the posthuman: on cyborgs and robots
- Borders and Conflict zones
- Globalization and societies
- Heterotopia of Time/ Museums/ Archive
- Science fictional spaces
- Spaces, time and memory
- Eco-criticism
- Literary cartography
- Cognitive mapping
- Modern vs. postmodern strategies of Surveillance
- Media studies and the network revolution
- News today: Fake information, mis-information, dis-information and
  post-truth
- Remote learning/ Distance learning
- Politics and nations beyond time and space
- Nations, inter-nations, citizenship
- Alternative histories, alternative spaces
- Time vs. Duration
- Chronological time vs psychological time
- Time and history


Submissions

The Conference Steering Committee is delighted to invite contributors
to submit abstracts of 250 words, for a twenty-minute presentation,
including 5 keywords and a short bio.

Please send your abstract to both:
[email protected]
[email protected]

Deadline for submission:
December 25, 2021

Notifications of acceptance/rejection will be sent by January 5.
A selection of essays will be published in conference proceedings.

The conference language used is English.


Scientific Committee

Prof. Mohamed Jabeur, University of Carthage
Prof. Saloua Karoui Ounelli, University of Tunis
Prof. Rached Khalifa, University of Tunis El Manar
Prof. Sadok Bouhlila, University of Manouba
Prof. Faiza Derbal, University of Manouba
Prof. Chokri Smaoui, Sultan Qaboos University
Prof. Lanouar Ben Hafsa, University of Tunis
Prof. Taoufik Djebali, University of Caen, Normandie
Prof. Hager Ben Driss, University of Tunis

 
Contact:

Organising Committee "Other Times, Other Spaces"
Department of English
Higher Institute of Languages, Tunis (ISLT)
University of Carthage
Email: [email protected]





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