Fabula, la recherche en littérature (appels)

International Conference on Representations of European Identity

Appel à contribution

Information publiée le mardi 5 mai 2009 par Marielle Macé (source : Margot Irvine)

Date limite : 31 juillet 2009

Paper and/or panel proposals are invited for a 3-day multi-disciplinary international conference on representations of European identity: ‘Europe in its Own Eyes / Europe in the Eyes of the Other.' (October 1-3, 2010)

Submissions are encouraged from a wide range of disciplines, with particular emphasis on literature, film, history, music, art, and political science.

As Manfred Pfister observes, “each description or definition of the other culture implies a self-description or self-definition. A culture defines itself by defining other cultures; the self defines itself by defining the other.” As the title suggests, this conference is intended to be as wide-ranging as possible in addressing the manner in which European identity has been and continues to be represented, including European self-representations as well representations by others, whether ‘internal' or ‘external' to the entity that is Europe. These categories are of course different in today's post-millennial Europe than they were earlier in the 20th century or further back in history – a dimension of such representations which cannot be ignored if one seeks to understand contemporary manifestations of European ‘nationalism', or other forms of collective identity. The conference organizers invite papers on the themes of:

·        Migration

·        Linguistic identity

·        Memory

·        Nationalism and postnationalism

·        Domestic politics and governance

·        Civil society and democracy

·        European integration and regionalism

·        The north/south and, conversely, the east/west divides

                                                                                                               

as these questions are defined and perceived in the humanities and in the social sciences.

Prospective delegates are invited to submit an abstract, of no more than 250 words, by July 31, 2009.

Please visit the conference website at http://arts.uoguelph.ca/euid2010/


Responsable : Sandra Parmegiani

Url de référence :
http://arts.uoguelph.ca/euid2010/

Adresse : School of Languages and Literatures, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1



Dernières annonces d'appels à contribution :

« Expanded Cinema » et art médiatique. Quelles politiques du sensible ?

Colloque international : Les jeux de mots et la réflexion métalinguistique. Nouvelles perspectives interdisciplinaires

Le conte : d’un art à l’autre. Adaptations et devenir des contes populaires en Europe centrale et orientale (XIXe-XXe s.)

Comment l’art déjoue les frontières invisibles

Topographies, architextures. Espèces d’espaces perecquiens (Cahiers Georges Perec, n° 12)

Entité et identité (ENTIDENTIC 2012)

Réécrire la littérature

Une autre mesure. L'image sous l'angle des proportions.

La critique littéraire d'Alexandre Dumas (père)

Esthétique et politique des cartes

Maurice Blanchot et l'Allemagne

Guy Debord

  Penser le mouvement

Preoccupied: The Words, Wounds and Works of Occupations Past and Present 

Kisses and a Love Letter:  Reading Sexed Subjectivity in Anglophone Literature and Visual Arts after Lacan’s Seminar XX

LGBTQI Graduate Students and Academia (MLA Graduate Student Caucus)

Tropes of Passing Time in the 19th-Century European Novel (MLA Graduate Student Caucus)

La littérature québécoise de 1990 à aujourd’hui : doutes, certitudes et espaces de nouveautés

The Romanian Journal of Modern History

Théorie et pratique dans la recherche en danse

“Fastes & Famines” (Colloque des études françaises du 19ème siècle)  

Héros voyageurs et constructions identitaires

Emma, c'est nous : penser l'expérience de lecture

The Spring of Our Discontent Renewal, Recycling, Re-Assembling (Grad Students)

Poésie et langue

Fil d'informations RSS Fil d'information RSS   Fabula sur Facebook Fabula sur Facebook   Fabula sur Twitter Fabula sur Twitter