posted by user: Transnational || 2583 views || tracked by 1 users: [display]

Americanness 2014 : History, Fiction, Representations: the Voices that Build the Americas

FacebookTwitterLinkedInGoogle

Link: http://latinculturetoday.blogspot.com/2014/01/what-is-americanness-afterall.html
 
When Nov 13, 2014 - Nov 15, 2014
Where France
Submission Deadline Jan 31, 2014
Notification Due Feb 15, 2014
Final Version Due Aug 30, 2014
Categories    american studies   literature   cultural studies   latin america
 

Call For Papers

International Conference: Organized by ERIAC (Equipe de Recherche Interdisciplinaire sur les Aires Culturelles/University of Rouen, Normandy, France)

"History, fiction, representations: the voices that build the Americas"
November 13-15th, 2014


KEYNOTE SPEAKER: Giannina Braschi, celebrated Hispanic-American author of the postmodern poetry trilogy "Empire of Dreams", the Spanglish classic "Yo-Yo Boing!" and the controversial dramatic novel "United States of Banana".

This multidisciplinary conference aims at examining the present state of the interrogations on Americanness from the 1970s to the present day, the concept being understood in the local, national and transcontinental senses of the term. The American continent was and still is a magnet for populations or individuals in search of a better world, people that it has either accepted or rejected all along its history. How does Americanness, whether real or mythical, welcoming or exclusive, serve as a criterion for an identity quest within the constant redefinition and the evolution of the cultural visions of North America and Latin America?

Our questioned will inscribe itself within the historical inheritance of America as a land of discovery, conquest and colonization. Our interest will focus precisely on the voices that enable the construction, hence, necessarily, the invention of a world whose novelty now requires questioning: does the New World specifically and uniquely preserve this newness? The question of innovation and continuity, both in time and space, immediately comes to mind to whose interested in the Americas, from cross-perspectives on the geographical and cultural areas as well as the historical periods that are so many landmarks for identity construction.

What “voices” are we talking about? The term is to be understood in a broad sense that should no t be restricted to language, speech and discourse but rather open to notions of focalization, point of view, vision and style, thus involving different media. Those voices, whether historical, historiographic, literary, artistic, political or social, take the past into account to tell the present and head towards the future: what future is there for a multiple Americanness? We will take interest in the plural expression of Americanness through voices from the fringe, from the periphery, the subaltern that, however, are the very fabric of the Americas: immigrants, gays, women, Blacks, Native Americans, Chicanos, all speak out their distinct, unique voices, voices that, beyond their differences, may, however, reveal a form of Americanness that would be built and invented in the light of a questioning on identity categories. Those voices give birth to strategies of composition and structures that enable to express the mix and the plurality as well as to represent diversity, tension, motion and the rejection of a fixed categorization that is necessarily inadequate and sclerotic.

Trying to define a potential American specificity, we are dealing with issues of exchanges and interactions between cultures, whether they evolve on a global or a on a more strictly national level. Cultural plurality, which leads to a questioning of identity, finds an echo in the plurality of genres of expression, which encourages the development of innovative, pioneering discourses, genres that themselves are inscribed in a hybridizing trend where fiction – whether it be literary, pictorial or cinematographic – combines itself with historiography and sociology to create the diversity of the Americas.

* In everyday life; a mixed languages halfway between Spanish and English opens out the path for a new identity for immigrants/Is there any future for the survival of the vernacular languages of the Indian populations?

* The individual and society: are marginal, peripheral, subaltern voices the new voices through which a new, reconstructed vision of the Americas expresses itself? Which place can be given to the individual in the political and economic systems that structure society?

* The individual and space: can migratory movements and nomadism bring about an ever shifting identity of populations, of individuals?

* How are the images of America that tend to build up the definition of Americanness contested and/or revisited from both within and without the continent? For instance, hasn’t the conquering power associated to the United States given birth, in the global world, to another power that needs to be reconsidered ? Are the poverty, the subordination, the underdevelopment linked to Andean populations evolving identity markers? and in everyday life; a mixed languages halfway between Spanish and English opens out the path for a new identity for immigrants/Is there any future for the survival of the vernacular languages of the Indian populations?

* The individual and society: are marginal, peripheral, subaltern voices the new voices through which a new, reconstructed vision of the Americas expresses itself? Which place can be given to the individual in the political and economic systems that structure society?

* The individual and space: can migratory movements and nomadism bring about an ever shifting identity of populations, of individuals?

* How are the images of America that tend to build up the definition of Americanness contested and/or revisited from both within and without the continent? For instance, hasn’t the conquering power associated to the United States given birth, in the global world, to another power that needs to be reconsidered ? Are the poverty, the subordination, the underdevelopment linked to Andean populations evolving identity markers?

Presentations should last 20 minutes at most in order to allow time for discussion. The working languages will be English, French and Spanish. Authors will be requested to send an abstract that will be translated by the organizers and handed in to participants in order to facilitate discussion.

Proposals (200 to 300 words), together with a brief bio of the author, should be sent to altissut@yahoo.fr by January 31, 2014. The cost of registration for presenters is 60 euros. It includes the lunches on November 13 and 14 as well the conference material. Registration is free for students.

Related Resources

TRA2025   THE RISE OF ASIA 70 YEARS AFTER BANDUNG: What possibilities to build the world anew?
GIFCon 2024   GIFCon 2024: Conjuring Creatures and Worlds
Carpathian culture and heritage 2025   Call for Papers: The cultures and heritage of the communities along the Carpathian Arc
Victorian American Myths in Video Games 2025   International Conference on Victorian and American Myths in Video Games
The Mississippi River: A Cultural Artery 2025   Call for Papers: The Mississippi: Soundings on America’s Arterial River
JSA 2024   Japan Studies Association Conference
IJMVSC 2024   The International Journal of Managing Value and Supply Chains
HeterodoxConference 2025   Towards the History of a Heterodox Tradition in Analytic Philosophy: Transformative, Humanistic, Conversational
XVIII FEHM 2025   XVIII Scientific Meeting of the Spanish Foundation of Early Modern History
CETA's EOAP 2025   Call for chapters: Comprehensive Training and Employment Act's (CETA) Employment of Artists Project (1974–1981)