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City Margins, City Memories. Deadline for Proposals: 7 June 2013full name / name of organization: School of Modern Languages & School of Philosophy & Religion, Bangor University & Institute of Germanic and Romance Studies contact email: cityconference@bangor.ac.uk First Call for Papers CITY MARGINS, CITY MEMORIES Date: Monday 7 April – Tuesday 8 April, 2014 Venue: Institute of Germanic & Romance Studies, An International Interdisciplinary Conference organized by the School of Modern Languages Keynote Speakers: Professor Bill Marshall (IGRS) & Professor Hugh Campbell (UCD School of Architecture). There is little doubt that cities are growing, often merging with each other, as they spread across the face of the planet, seeking to contain the needs of our increasing populations. The number of city dwellers has increased from just 3% of the global population in 1800, to 50% in 2008, rising to a prediction of 75% in 2050. Just last year, in 2012, 26 urban areas qualified as ‘megacities’ with populations of over 10 million. Such growth brings an inevitable increase in interactivity and communications between cities, accentuating at once a sense of community and isolation within its inhabitants. The intense urbanization of recent times has also brought into focus the need to assimilate disparate memories of the past into a landscape of the future. Despite the predominance of cities and the fact that they shape who we are and how we relate within the world, attempts to define and encapsulate their very nature remain elusive. City Margins, City Memories thus proposes to explore the multiplicity of meanings of the city, taking ‘margins’ and ‘memory’ as two important and, often, intersecting phenomena to orient this investigation of urban spatialities. The organizers encourage submissions on all aspects of the city that involve the ideas of ‘margins’ and/or ‘memory’, and would particularly welcome interdisciplinary contributions. ‘Margins’ is to be understood broadly as encompassing any topic that addresses issues of boundaries (as an inhibiting force) or borders (as areas of intersection), while standing both for isolation and alterity, as well as for connectedness, communication and creativity. ‘Memory’ is similarly to be interpreted broadly, referring to the recall of ideas and cultures, to remembrance and its links with the imagination. The following questions suggest a number of themes to be explored, but wider interpretations of the conference theme are encouraged. Where do cities begin and end? Is there a city ‘centre’? Where are city margins? To what extent can the margin be considered an unstable/mobile condition? Are margins boundaries or borders? What is the role of architecture in creating (or destroying) sites of community? Does the city have an ‘everyday life?’ Where and what is ‘public space’? What does it mean for the margins to ‘belong’ in the city? To what extent is ‘home’ an imagined condition? How do alternative perspectives on the city alter urban understanding/experience? Do ‘marginal’ memories destabilize the histories of dominant groups at local, national and/or international levels? Is there such a thing as an urban body? What is the relationship between body and building? What is the relationship of the sensory to the cultural? Is architecture ever ‘beyond words’? Is architecture historical or mnemonic? What is the relationship of architecture to the imagination? Is the city archetypal? The deadline for proposals is: 7 June 2013 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 general_announcements humanities_computing_and_the_internet interdisciplinary international_conferences medieval modernist studies poetry popular_culture postcolonial religion renaissance romantic science_and_culture theatre theory travel_writing twentieth_century_and_beyond victorian
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