|
| Home ->Preconstituted Panel -> |
|
Already Closed! Deadine: March 1, 2009!
Preconstituted Panel
Panel 5: Discourses of War and Peace from a Transnational American Studies Perspective (Call for Participants)
Panel 6: The Greening of the American Mind: Race, Class, Gender and the Environment in Post-September 11 U.S. (Call for Participants)
Panel 1: Imagining America/Imagining China in American Culture
This panel delves into the various national, transnational and international ways that the United States and China are imagined and imaged in contemporary cultural forms. Globalization has expanded rapidly in recent decades and American patterns are everywhere prominent in the economics, politics and social changes, especially in China. Yet, the interconnections and transmissions of material culture reach at least as far back as 1784 when trading ships brought Chinese products to American shores and returned to China with US goods. The papers in this panel are directly related to many of the conference subthemes.
Clara Juncker, in¡°Imagining American Success: Ha Jin¡¯s Immigration Narratives,¡± explores how failures and success attends the American Dream for immigrants who become transnationals in contemporary America.
Zhao Wuming, in ¡°The American Dream and the Chinese Dream: Local and Transnational Visions,¡± discusses how the American Dream, as part of the transnational imagination for individual progress, has been recently adapted and renewed in China for local residents and others in terms of ideology and rhetoric.
Russell Duncan, in ¡°Exhibiting Myth and Reality: The ¡®Art in America¡¯ Show, 2007,¡± analyzes American and Chinese themes in the paintings and sculpture selected and exhibited in China in 2007.
The papers connect nicely by looking at critical understandings of American culture in the United States and China. The comparative aspect tests the notion of exceptionalism and looks at how myths are presented in narratives of literature, art, history and culture. Paul Levine will encourage the audience to engage the panellists in discussing the reception of American culture in China.
Keywords: transnationalism, immigration and migration, myth and American Dream
Panel 2: Hemispheric America(s) and the Transnational Turn: Of Paradigm and/or Perspective (Call for Participants)
Recent years have seen an increasing emphasis on the ¡°transnational turn¡± in American Studies, while at the same time witnessing a resurgence of the ¡°hemispheric,¡± an older paradigm that reconfigures the notion of America while reaching outward to what could be called a transnational practice. Although both perspectives would seem to cover much the same ground in highlighting the importance of crossing borders¡ª whether these be national, geographical, linguistic, cultural or racial¡ªboth the ¡°hemispheric¡± yet suggest something different and ultimately distinguishable one from the other. Considering the ¡°hemispheric¡± and the ¡°transnational¡± as two paradigmatic ways to approach a globalized American Studies, this panel will explore the implications of both perspectives in the search for a revised understanding of American culture. Questions to be addressed will include: how should the relationship between these two seemingly similar yet very different perspectives be understood? What kinds of cross-cultural interactions do they engender and what can or do they bring to our understanding of American literature, history and culture? Is one of these two important perspectives more useful than the other in rethinking our understanding of American Studies, or are both equally important to that endeavor? If so, why, and if not, why not? Are they mutually exclusive, or interchangeable? What does one bring to the critical table that the other does not, and vice-versa? What is the interrelationship between globalization, transnationalism and hemispheric approaches to American Studies? How do these perspectives impede or enable our ability to investigate the relation between American Studies and such issues as language, history, class, race, and gender, etc.? Finally, what kinds of explorations does each approach enable and/or prevent? By bringing these two ways of thinking about American Studies into productive dialogue, this panel will investigate the significance of their convergence to the study of American culture in global context.
Keywords: hemispheric, transnational, paradigm
Cyraina Johnson-Roullier is interested in essays that approach these issues from a range of disciplinary perspectives. Those wishing to join this panel should contact directly with Cyraina Johnson-Roullier.
Contact information: Cyraina Johnson-Roullier Department of English University of Notre Dame 352 O¡¯Shaughnessy Hall Notre Dame, IN 46556 Telephone: 773/710-5355 E-mail: johnson.64@nd.edu
Panel 3: Globalizing American Liberties: U.S. Law and Literature in Comparative Perspective (Call for One More Participant)
The purpose of this panel will be to consider from a legalistic perspective how issues of individual human rights have been played out in U.S. literature and culture. By comparing this question with how issues of rights have been defined in other countries, it will be possible to gain new perspectives on the global circulation of American culture.
Keywords: Globalization, Law, Literature
Speakers: Paul Giles (session organizer, Oxford University, UK). ¡°The Rights of Man: A Comparative Perspective.¡± Email: paul.giles@rai.ox.ac.uk Veronica Hendrick (City University of New York, USA). ¡°Slavery and Civil Rights: Placing American Literature and the US Constitution in a Global Context.¡±
Email: veronicahendrick@yahoo.com
NB: It would be possible to place one more speaker on this panel, if anyone has proposed an individual paper concerned with questions of law or civil rights in relation to American literature. Otherwise, the panel could operate with just two speakers, with Paul Giles offering a longer paper.
Panel 4: Chinese Exceptionalism in the 21st Century: Replicating the American Example (Call for Participants)
During the 20th Century, the notion of ¡°American Exceptionalism¡± emerged, most notably perhaps from 1968 with publication of Redeemer Nation by Ernest Lee Tuveson. It is not a myth, but a reality, that the United States became a ¡°Redeemer Nation¡± at least from World War Two until much later in the 20th Century. Whether what was once a reality now has become a myth is debatable.
Much more evident is the reality that the People¡¯s Republic of China has become what could be termed a ¡°Redeemer Nation¡± as well, following deliberately in the pathway America carved. The 20th Century was referred to frequently as ¡°The American Century,¡± partly due to American Exceptionalism, and quite possibly the 21st Century will become known eventually as ¡°The Chinese Century,¡± due to Chinese Exceptionalism.
This Panel will consider examples of Chinese Exceptionalism, to begin with, and then examine the origin and characteristics of each example. The purpose of doing so will be to test the hypothesis that, far from challenging American Exceptionalism (except sometimes in rhetoric), China has silently embraced it, and gradually copied it in significant ways. Part of the evidence seems to be China¡¯s rise from isolation to becoming a global leader in ways that have paralleled the American experience, but in a more recent era, ranging from China's own ¡°Manifest Destiny¡± in the liberation and economic subsidisation of XiZang, to its global peacekeeping expenditures and commitments, to its foreign direct investment (FDI) globally and even in America itself.
Presenters wishing to join this Panel may contact Dr. David A. Jones, Professor of Law, Management, Foreign Policy, American Studies Center, University of Warsaw, Poland. david.jones@uw.edu.pl
Panel 5: Discourses of War and Peace from a Transnational American Studies Perspective (Call for Participants)
War, and even more so peace, have been by and large conspicuous by their absence in the current debate over the internationalization of American Studies. It is not so much that scholars omit references to wars as such, but the fact that war and peace are not thought of as conceptual paradigms through which to articulate the discourse of transnational American Studies.
And yet both peace and war are by definition trans-national; they negotiate between and across borders, identities, histories, and cultures. This panel wishes to investigate in what ways both War and Peace Studies may intersect with and contribute to the current reconfiguration of the field of American Studies. Topics to be investigated include, but are not limited to, war and peace as border-crossing experiences; responses to U.S. occupation/liberation of foreign countries, from the nineteenth-century to the present; American responses to their own acts of conquest/liberation; comparative analyses of American war literatures; peace movements as transnational formations.
Presenters wishing to join this Panel may contact Giorgio Mariani giorgio.mariani@uniroma1.it
Panel 6: The Greening of the American Mind: Race, Class, Gender and the Environment in Post-September 11 U.S. (Call for Participants)
Perhaps no other writer has expressed the role played by nature in the configuration of the American psyque more powerfully than Willa Cather in the opening lines of her novel O, Pioneers!, when her narrator describes the first, often unsucessful, attempts to survive in the endless and flattened prairies of the Nebraskan Plains. However, in American culture two opposing attitudes towards nature and the environment can be traced back to the founding era: a conservationist trend coexisting, and often conflicting, with a Puritan fear of unmediated nature. This peculiar relation of humans with the environment has been the subject of many classic works in American Studies that explore the essential role that nature has played in the configuration of the national character and point it out as fundamental component of American exceptionalism. An exceptionalism that ended abruptly in September 11, 2001. If the destruction of the World Trade Center inaugurated the 21st century with the evidence that the US was under attack, Hurricane Katrina, four years later, became a devastating ally to the forces that were trying to destroy the American way of life. Floods, snowstorms, fires, and droughts seem to be striking the United States as never before. Climate change cannot be dismissed as a mere hypothesis anymore. Literature, a permanent mirror of the natural world, has always portrayed the problematic relationship that human beings have with the environment. Now that the climate change is relocating the protagonism of the individual in favour of the primacy of the land, it becomes necessary to redefine the place of the human being in relation to nature. The title of our proposal, "The Greening of the American Mind" intends thus to explore the intersection of concepts such as race, gender and class with the environment. We are then interested in the various ways in which ecology is propiciating the emergence of a new critical categorization that erases the traditional distinctions based on ethnic or sexual principles, specially after September 11 and Hurricane Katrina. Hence, we invite contributions addressing the exploration of this new categorization as reflected in theory, contemporary literature and related arts. We propose the following sub-themes:
-Past and present: evolving approaches to nature in American literature. -Problems in ecocritical theory. -American nature writing and environmental politics. -Ethnic literatures, environmental justice, and ecocriticism. -Ecocriticism and urban environments. -Ecofeminism in American contemporary literature. -Imagining the Earth: ecocriticism in the 21st century. -Kyoto accord and American exceptionalism. -Katrina and American exceptionalism. -Literary ecology in American contemporary literature. -Ecocriticism & postcolonial theory. -America North-South relations from a ¡®green perspective¡¯. -Globalisation and contemporary politics. -Ecocritical tropes: wilderness, pastoral and apocalypse.
PLEASE SEND SHORT PROPOSALS TO THE Organizers:
Dr. Manuel Broncano Rodr¨ªguez: Universidad de Le¨®n (Spain) manuel.broncano@unileon.es Dr. Rosa Mar¨ªa D¨ªez Cobo: Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata (Argentina) circe83@hotmail.com
|
|
|
| |
 |
| |
|
|
|
To learn about the IASA, click on the icon |
 |
|