search the archive
search the archive categoriesadministration |
[UPDATE] [Pre]Occupations: Working, Seizing, Dwelling (Saturday, April 16th, 2011)full name / name of organization: Department of English at the University of Rhode Island contact email: uriconference2011@gmail.com
The Latin root of “occupation”—occupare—accounts for the word’s aggressive, militaristic sense: to seize or to capture. While “occupation” still retains this meaning, it also comes to signify one’s profession, the office that one holds, or the work that one does within or on a culture, a nation, or a world. But this word also has a material dimension—an abode, a building, a dwelling—as well as a ruminative sense—an abiding, a dwelling, a letting be. These dimensions or senses demonstrate the agility of “occupation,” but to them we also add something else: that occupations often precede us, sweeping us into a being or becoming preoccupied. This year we hope that our title [Pre]Occupations captures these competing and collaborating dimensions, opening a field of exciting and exigent problematics: What history or histories might one claim? What periods seize one’s interest? What miracles, joys, sadnesses, or violences [pre]occupy a reader, a worker, or a citizen? What labors does one undergo in order to live? What perpetual efforts does one attempt in order to make a present, a home, or a dwelling? What wars of nations or ideas, what occupations, what trespasses belabor the self and/or the other? What does it mean to be at work in a world or on a world? We invite graduate students to submit paper or panel proposals that attend to these (or related) questions. In addition, we encourage submissions from a variety of fields—history, film, cultural studies, philosophy, languages, literature, political science, rhetoric/composition, communications, psychology, sociology, anthropology, women’s studies, library and information studies, and visual studies (though not limited to these fields). Possible topics and areas of interest include, but are not limited to: Submit abstracts of 250 words (for individual proposals) or 400 words (for panel proposals) to uriconference2011@gmail.com by February 1st, 2011. Please include your full name, contact information, and institutional affiliation. Individual presentations should be no longer than 15 minutes. cfp categories: african-american american cultural_studies_and_historical_approaches ecocriticism_and_environmental_studies eighteenth_century ethnicity_and_national_identity film_and_television gender_studies_and_sexuality graduate_conferences medieval modernist studies poetry popular_culture postcolonial religion renaissance rhetoric_and_composition romantic theory twentieth_century_and_beyond victorian
|