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Making It Work: US Thought and Culture Between Praxis and Paralysis, April 5-6 2013full name / name of organization: US Literatures and Cultures Consortium at the University of Michigan contact email: usistconference2013@gmail.com Are there distinctively American attitudes toward objectivity and truth, judgment and action? Two of the most enduring cliches about US culture are, first, that its thought characteristically refuses universal grounds, and second, that it privileges material practicality over theoretical or metaphysical abstraction. Yet without universal grounds, how can we be convinced that anything is worth doing? Let’s grant that it is; such a groundless granting may initially let us act with a sense of freedom and unlimited potential, but justifying or revising that action requires us to establish provisional grounds that can themselves be hedged, negotiated, interrogated to the paralyzing point of infinity. Which side of this tension to prioritize—whether to seek ways of reducing deliberative friction or to recuperate the experience of hesitancy, to justify eliding contingencies or to dwell in possibility—is a governing question for distinctively American thinkers from Jonathan Edwards to Audre Lorde, Emily Dickinson to Sidney Hook, Jane Addams to Timothy Leary. How have objectivity, truth, rationality, and agency been represented and conceptualized in US thought and culture? How have these models permitted or circumscribed action? How have they informed individual and communal practices: from action planned or spontaneous, to decision-making public or private, to governance local and federal? What universalist appeals do make their way into US culture? How are shared belief and/or knowledge constructed, articulated, perpetuated, scrutinized and revised without universalist guarantees? How have such modes of understanding interacted and conflicted? How, essentially, have US philosophers, artists, politicians and citizens forged justifications for acting and judging in a world without universal grounds? And how and why have some of them found greater value in resisting just this rush to action? Such questions might be addressed in relation to topics like, but not limited to, the following: -the US-ness of US thought Abstracts of up to 300 words for papers that will cast new light on these questions should be submitted by email to usistconference2013@gmail.com by January 8th 2013. We seek submissions from fellow graduate students in any discipline, who work in any period of, and who take any approach to, US Culture. Accepted presenters will be notified by February 1st. Keynotes: Paul Taylor (Philosophy / African American and Diaspora Studies, Penn State): author of Race: A Philosophical Introduction Check our website for information on our other activities this year: http://sitemaker.umich.edu/usists/home 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 interdisciplinary modernist studies poetry popular_culture religion science_and_culture theatre theory travel_writing twentieth_century_and_beyond victorian
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