Monuments - DEADLINE EXTENDED

deadline for submissions: 
November 1, 2018
full name / name of organization: 
Nordic Association for American Studies
contact email: 

 

The Biennial Conference of the Nordic Association for American Studies

25 – 27 April 2019 in Bergen, Norway

Submission deadline extended: 1 Nov. 2018

 

Confirmed keynote speakers:

  • Benjamin Filene, Professor of History and Chief Curator of the North Carolina Museum of History
  • Lisa Parks, Professor of Comparative Media Studies & Director of the Global Technologies and Cultures Lab, MIT
  • Richard Rodriguez, Journalist and essayist 

Monuments construct the past in the present, and link it to a predetermined version of the future. Monuments tell singular and unified stories, acting as master narratives that impede other voices. Monuments have become some of America’s most important storytellers, giving form to power, but also to particular acts of resistance.

This is perhaps only to be expected, for the word “monument” bears within it the Latin mon, from monēre, which means “to remind,” but also means “to warn.” In its descriptive form “monumental” connotes something massive or imposing, something great in importance, but also expresses a sense of excess, of being overwhelmed. The word itself thus invites a chain of questions: What do monuments call to memory? What might they warn us against? What versions of events do they impose in presenting greatness? Who and what deserves recognition? How can monuments commemorate different or competing pasts? What should be done with monuments that uplift violent pasts?

The NAAS 2019 conference in Bergen on “Monuments” welcomes panel and paper proposals that address monuments and the monumental in relation to American literature, history, politics, media, art and popular culture, transnational and transcultural and comparative approaches. Keeping in mind that not all monuments are made of stone—Hemingway has been called a monument, political symbols and landscapes act as monuments, the literary canon and the Bible are monuments to Western culture—the list of different kinds of monuments is near endless. Some themes may be, but are not limited to:

  • Conceptualizations of the American past
  • Preservation and commemoration
  • Tradition and cultural heritage
  • Cultural perceptions, shifting attitudes towards the monument
  • Representation Memory and forgetting
  • Genre or aesthetic form
  • Naming
  • Landscapes, places and spaces
  • Myth
  • Resistance to the monument
  • Inscription
  • The non-monumental
  • False memories
  • Amnesia
  • Nostalgia
  • Imaginaries
  • Ossification
  • War
  • Architecture
  • Photography
  • Religion
  • Visibility/invisibility

Please send abstracts and panel proposals to NAASBergen@gmail.com by 1 Nov. 2018. Abstracts for individual panel presentations (20 minutes) should be no longer than 250 words; proposals for panels or workshops should be no longer than 500 words. Notifications of acceptance will be sent out in October.

The conference is open to scholars and students from all countries, but we offer lower registration fees to members of NAAS (Nordic Association for American Studies), EAAS (European Association for American Studies), and ASA (American Studies Association in the U.S.).

A conference website will be made available in the autumn. If you have any questions regarding the conference or your proposal before then, please write to the conference organizers at: NAASBergen@gmail.com.

 

 

Conference organizers:

Jena Habegger-Conti, Associate Professor, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences

President, American Studies Association of Norway

 

Asbjørn Grønstad, Professor, University of Bergen

Vice-President, American Studies Association of Norway

 

Lene Johannessen, Professor, University of Bergen

Committee Chair, American Studies Association of Norway