Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Fwd: [New announcement] CALL FOR PAPERS: Trans- and Trance (Western University Graduate Student Conference; London, Ontario, Canada)


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From: Inquire: Journal of Comparative Literature <groups-noreply@linkedin.com>
Date: Tue, Nov 25, 2014 at 2:58 AM
Subject: [New announcement] CALL FOR PAPERS: Trans- and Trance (Western University Graduate Student Conference; London, Ontario, Canada)
To: Abu Saleh <abusalehenglish@gmail.com>


Keynotes by Dr. David S. Ferris (University of Colorado at Boulder) & Dr. Joel Faflak (Western University)

Trans- and trance are ways of life: from transcendentalist impulses in the Epic of Gilgamesh, to Freud's discussion of the phenomenon of transference, to the rise of transnationalism in modern times, the conceptual import of "trans-" has always lied in its ability to denote mobility against and across frontiers, positionality along multiple axes, and shifting modes of territoriality within agonistic horizons. Trance almost always followed.

"Trans-" as a concept has steadily grown in importance as a way to inform critical thought and study in many intellectual fields and disciplines. In her 2014 report on "trans-" as one of the American Comparative Literature Association's "ideas of the decade," Jessica Berman notes how "'trans-' is not a substantive but rather an 'orientation' of critical approaches, attitudes, and habits of reading or experiencing".

The Comparative Literature, Hispanic Studies, & Theory and Criticism programs at Western University invite you to the 17th Annual Grad Student Conference to be held from March 5-7, 2015 in London, Ontario, Canada. We invite papers that engage critical notions of transit, change, and tumult in multidisciplinary contexts, especially those that highlight "trans-" as a paradigm of dynamic subjectivity negotiating potentially violent domains. As trance culture seeks to reach the elusive state that lies Beyond, the organizers hope that the conference will provide insight into possible conciliatory modes to the disruptions that the "trans-" phenomenon precipitates.

We encourage interdisciplinary submissions, including but not limited to literature, critical theory, cultural studies, digital humanities, linguistics, film studies, visual arts, music, popular culture, architecture, history, and philosophy. Areas of interest may include, but are not limited to, the ff.:

1. Transformation: metamorphosis, posthumanism, science fiction, post-apocalyptic fiction, rhetoric, semiotics of architecture, performativity

2. Trance and the Transcendent: the sublime, the oneiric, the orphic, aesthetics of trance, "the music of the Spheres", euphoria, consciousness studies, hypnotext and literary mesmerism

3. Transgression in its various forms: proletarian literature, resistance and subversion literature, agitprop, the artist as Revolutionary, experimental literature, the Avant-Garde, the Gothic, queer theory

4. Transit and Transitions: immigrant literature, displacement, exile, postcolonialism, cosmopolitanism, urban culture, travel literature, border poetics, intersectionality, fluidity

5. Transsectional figures: the diasporic writer, the queer, the new feminist, the post- and transhuman, the academic as public intellectual, the digital humanist

6. Transference: creativity and trauma, psychoanalysis, ecocriticism, literature and epistemology, catharsis

7. Transfusion: language acquisition and development, digital humanities, normcore culture, cultural transmission, medical humanities, new media, pop culture Transtemporal: post-war, post 9/11, nostalgia, memory, ephemerality, interruptions, waves, pop-ups

8. Transculturalism and Transnationalism: hybridity, identity, appropriation, selfhood, folk culture, memes

9. Transactions: economies of exchange, reader response theory, reception, encounters with the Other, linguistic exchange

10. Translating the trance of the original: translation, transmedial art, photography, Benjamin, Barthes

Those interested in delivering 15 to 20-minute presentations must submit abstracts of no more than 300 words to https://www.tfaforms.com/348456 by 10 December 2014. You can also email your abstract, name, paper keywords, institutional affiliation, tech requirements, & a 50-word biography to transtrance17@gmail.com. Abstracts and presentations in both English and Spanish are welcome.
 
 
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CALL FOR PAPERS: Trans- and Trance (Western University Graduate Student Conference; London, Ontario, Canada)
 
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Christian Ylagan
PHD Student / Teaching Assistant at Western University
 
 
Keynotes by Dr. David S. Ferris (University of Colorado at Boulder) & Dr. Joel Faflak (Western University)

Trans- and trance are ways of life: from transcendentalist impulses in the Epic of Gilgamesh, to Freud's discussion of the phenomenon of transference, to the rise of transnationalism in modern times, the conceptual import of "trans-" has always lied in its ability to denote mobility against and across frontiers, positionality along multiple axes, and shifting modes of territoriality within agonistic horizons. Trance almost always followed.

"Trans-" as a concept has steadily grown in importance as a way to inform critical thought and study in many intellectual fields and disciplines. In her 2014 report on "trans-" as one of the American Comparative Literature Association's "ideas of the decade," Jessica Berman notes how "'trans-' is not a substantive but rather an 'orientation' of critical approaches, attitudes, and habits of reading or experiencing".

The Comparative Literature, Hispanic Studies, & Theory and Criticism programs at Western University invite you to the 17th Annual Grad Student Conference to be held from March 5-7, 2015 in London, Ontario, Canada. We invite papers that engage critical notions of transit, change, and tumult in multidisciplinary contexts, especially those that highlight "trans-" as a paradigm of dynamic subjectivity negotiating potentially violent domains. As trance culture seeks to reach the elusive state that lies Beyond, the organizers hope that the conference will provide insight into possible conciliatory modes to the disruptions that the "trans-" phenomenon precipitates.

We encourage interdisciplinary submissions, including but not limited to literature, critical theory, cultural studies, digital humanities, linguistics, film studies, visual arts, music, popular culture, architecture, history, and philosophy. Areas of interest may include, but are not limited to, the ff.:

1. Transformation: metamorphosis, posthumanism, science fiction, post-apocalyptic fiction, rhetoric, semiotics of architecture, performativity

2. Trance and the Transcendent: the sublime, the oneiric, the orphic, aesthetics of trance, "the music of the Spheres", euphoria, consciousness studies, hypnotext and literary mesmerism

3. Transgression in its various forms: proletarian literature, resistance and subversion literature, agitprop, the artist as Revolutionary, experimental literature, the Avant-Garde, the Gothic, queer theory

4. Transit and Transitions: immigrant literature, displacement, exile, postcolonialism, cosmopolitanism, urban culture, travel literature, border poetics, intersectionality, fluidity

5. Transsectional figures: the diasporic writer, the queer, the new feminist, the post- and transhuman, the academic as public intellectual, the digital humanist

6. Transference: creativity and trauma, psychoanalysis, ecocriticism, literature and epistemology, catharsis

7. Transfusion: language acquisition and development, digital humanities, normcore culture, cultural transmission, medical humanities, new media, pop culture Transtemporal: post-war, post 9/11, nostalgia, memory, ephemerality, interruptions, waves, pop-ups

8. Transculturalism and Transnationalism: hybridity, identity, appropriation, selfhood, folk culture, memes

9. Transactions: economies of exchange, reader response theory, reception, encounters with the Other, linguistic exchange

10. Translating the trance of the original: translation, transmedial art, photography, Benjamin, Barthes

Those interested in delivering 15 to 20-minute presentations must submit abstracts of no more than 300 words to https://www.tfaforms.com/348456 by 10 December 2014. You can also email your abstract, name, paper keywords, institutional affiliation, tech requirements, & a 50-word biography to transtrance17@gmail.com. Abstracts and presentations in both English and Spanish are welcome.
 
 
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