[csaa-forum] remove
kirsten at student.usyd.edu.au
kirsten at student.usyd.edu.au
Wed Jun 28 09:58:25 CST 2006
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> Today's Topics:
>
> 1. help (kirsten at student.usyd.edu.au)
> 2. new research and writing awards (Deb Verhoeven)
> 3. CFP and ECR/PG support: intersections of gender, race,
> religion and community (Tanja Dreher)
>
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
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> Message: 1
> Date: Tue, 27 Jun 2006 12:51:19 +1000
> From: kirsten at student.usyd.edu.au
> Subject: [csaa-forum] help
> To: csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au
> Message-ID: <1151376679.44a09d2717d21 at www-mail.usyd.edu.au>
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> Quoting csaa-forum-request at lists.cdu.edu.au:
>
> > Send csaa-forum mailing list submissions to
> > csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au
> >
> > To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit
> > http://lists.cdu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/csaa-forum
> > or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to
> > csaa-forum-request at lists.cdu.edu.au
> >
> > You can reach the person managing the list at
> > csaa-forum-owner at lists.cdu.edu.au
> >
> > When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific
> > than "Re: Contents of csaa-forum digest..."
> >
> >
> > Today's Topics:
> >
> > 1. Everyday Multiculturalism Conference Call for Papers
> > (Selvaraj Velayutham)
> >
> >
> > ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> >
> > Message: 1
> > Date: Mon, 26 Jun 2006 12:31:02 +1000
> > From: "Selvaraj Velayutham" <Selvaraj.Velayutham at scmp.mq.edu.au>
> > Subject: [csaa-forum] Everyday Multiculturalism Conference Call for
> > Papers
> > To: <csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au>
> > Message-ID: <449FD385.8ACF.0044.0 at scmp.mq.edu.au>
> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
> >
> > **PLEASE CIRCULATE**
> > Deadline for Abstracts Extended to 15 July 2006
> >
> > Key note speakers:
> > Professor Ien Ang, ARC Professorial Fellow, Centre for Cultural
> > Research, University of Western Sydney
> > Dr Greg Noble, School of Humanities and Languages, University of
> > Western Sydney
> >
> >
> > Everyday Multiculturalism
> >
> > A two day Conference
> > 28th and 29th September 2006
> > Centre for Research on Social Inclusion, Macquarie University
> > and the ARC Cultural Research Network
> >
> > CALL FOR PAPERS
> >
> > While research on Australian multiculturalism and racism is well
> > developed in Australia, qualitative research into everyday modes of
> > lived multiculturalism, remains fairly limited. This two day
> conference
> > seeks to bring together researchers exploring everyday experiences of
> > cultural diversity and difference (other case studies are also
> > welcomed).
> >
> > The conference will be divided into two parts:
> >
> > 1) Everyday Multiculturalism - Open theme
> > Day one will be an open themed day on Everyday Multiculturalism.
> Papers
> > in this section will engage with the quotidian dimensions of living
> with
> > diversity. Quotidian diversity has variously been described as
> > 'togetherness-in-difference' (Ang 2000), and 'inhabiting
> > difference' (Hage 1998). We take the term to mean those perspectives
> > on cultural diversity which recognise the embodied or inhabited nature
> > of living with cultural difference. We are particularly interested in
> > papers that focus on the intersections and relationships between
> > cultural groups, rather than research taking a single ethnic group as
> a
> > focus. Papers may explore the interconnections between the everyday
> and
> > larger discourses; everyday interconnections, affinities, and
> > solidarities, and everyday disjunctures, discomforts, and racisms.
> > Papers may explore modes of living with and across difference in
> > suburbia or regional Australia such as through food, neighbouring,
> > shopping or sport, or issues such as multicultural place-sharing, and
> > battles over place identity and belonging. Papers which take an
> embodied
> > approach, such as through frameworks such as affect or Bourdieu's
> > habitus are also particularly welcome.
> >
> > 2) Cronulla and the Everyday Politics of Cultural Difference in
> > Suburbia
> > Day two papers will present a collection of new work reflecting on the
> > Cronulla riots - the causes, the riots themselves, and their
> > ramifications. The Cronulla riots caught many commentators by
> surprise.
> > Some commentators argued that the riots were a symptom of everyday
> > tensions, others argued that Cronulla represents a failure of
> > multiculturalism, while still others argued that it was a result of a
> > decade of 'dog-whistle' politics in Australia. Racism, ethnocentrism
> > and other forms of prejudice are often born out of everyday encounters
> > with difference intertwined with national and global politics and
> > discourses. The aim of this day will be to offer an opportunity to
> > scholars to present works-in-progress around the Cronulla issue.
> >
> > We invite proposals from any discipline that engage with any aspect of
> > 'everyday multiculturalism' with a special focus on those employing
> > grounded methodologies such as fieldwork, interviews, focus groups and
> > ethnographic participant observation.
> >
> > Registration details, keynotes, and conference info will be announced
> > shortly.
> > Please submit abstracts of 250 words or less with a short biographical
> > paragraph by 15th July 2006 to selvaraj.velayutham at scmp.mq.edu.au
> >
> > Registration fee: $120
> > Conference Venue: MGSM Conference Centre, Macquarie University
> >
> > Convenors: Dr Amanda Wise and Dr Selvaraj Velayutham
> > Centre for Research on Social Inclusion, Macquarie
> > University
> > Enquiries: selvaraj.velayutham at scmp.mq.edu.au or
> > amanda.wise at scmp.mq.edu.au
> > Website: www.crsi.mq.edu.au
> >
> >
> > Dr. Selvaraj Velayutham
> > ARC Postdoctoral Research Fellow
> > Centre for Research on Social Inclusion
> > Building E7A 706
> > Macquarie University NSW 2109
> > Australia
> > Tel: 9850-4426
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------
> >
> > _______________________________________
> >
> > csaa-forum
> > discussion list of the cultural studies association of australasia
> >
> > www.csaa.asn.au
> >
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> > End of csaa-forum Digest, Vol 26, Issue 19
> > ******************************************
> >
>
>
>
>
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> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Tue, 27 Jun 2006 15:39:43 +1000
> From: Deb Verhoeven <deb.verhoeven at rmit.edu.au>
> Subject: [csaa-forum] new research and writing awards
> To: csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au
> Message-ID: <a0623090cc0c674c4c62f@[131.170.131.188]>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>
> NEW RESEARCH AND WRITING AWARDS ANNOUNCED
>
> The X111th Biennial Conference of the Film & History Association of
> Australia and New Zealand (FHAANZ ) will present for the first time a
> series of awards as part of the Conference program.
>
> Research and Writing Awards
> The Film & History Association Research and Writing Awards have been
> devised to honour excellence in film and television history
> publishing and research. Three competitive research and writing
> awards will be conferred by the Patrons of the Film & History
> Association for best monograph, best essay and best unpublished work.
>
> Achievement Awards
> Two Achievement Awards will be bestowed by the Film and History
> Conference organisers. These awards will recognise excellence of
> achievement by Australian and New Zealand film and television
> historians respectively.
>
> o The Joan Long Award commemorates the major contribution of
> the late producer, director and screenwriter whose passion for the
> medium of film, its future, its institutions, and the preservation of
> its history in Australia, was both selfless and inspiring.
> o The Jonathon Dennis Award is named after the driving force
> behind, spokesperson for, and first director of the New Zealand Film
> Archive who died from cancer, aged 48, in 2001.
>
> More detailed information on the new awards scheme, as well as terms
> and conditions of entry, nomination and entry forms, can be found on
> the Film & History Conference website:
> http://www.afiresearch.rmit.edu.au/fhc2006/awards.html
>
> For further information on the Film & History Association Research
> Awards, contact: ken.berryman at nfsa.afc.gov.au
>
>
> The Film and History Conference is held every two years and is an
> opportunity for international film scholars, archivists, and
> filmmakers to present their thoughts on recent debates and events in
> the fields of: film history, national and transnational cinemas, film
> theory, film practice and the importance of cinema to specific
> communities.
>
> This year's conference is titled Telling Stories: Cinema, History and
> Experience and will be jointly presented by the Department of Visual
> Culture, Monash University and The School of Applied Communication,
> RMIT University. The Conference will be staged at a number of central
> city venues, and run from 16 - 19 November.
>
> --
>
> Deb Verhoeven
> Associate Professor of Screen Studies
> _______________________________________________
>
> t: School Research Coordinator &
> Manager, AFI Research Collection
> School of Applied Communication
> RMIT University
> p: + 613 9925 2908
> e: deb.verhoeven at rmit.edu.au
>
> Film Critic
> The Deep End, Radio National
>
> AFI Research Collection
> www.afiresearch.rmit.edu.au
>
> Archive Forum
> www.afiresearch.rmit.edu.au/archiveforum
>
> The XIIIth Biennial Conference of the Film & History Association
> Melbourne, November 16-19, 2006
> www.afiresearch.rmit.edu.au/fhc2006/index.html
>
> _______________________________________________
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> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 3
> Date: Tue, 27 Jun 2006 15:21:28 +1000
> From: Tanja Dreher <tanja.dreher at uts.edu.au>
> Subject: [csaa-forum] CFP and ECR/PG support: intersections of
> gender, race, religion and community
> To: Csaa-Forum Email list <csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au>,
> l-ircr at uws.edu.au, hss-academic at listserv.uts.edu.au
> Message-ID: <44A0C058.10106 at uts.edu.au>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
>
> 'NOT ANOTHER HIJAB ROW'
>
> Publication support for Postgraduates and Early Career Researchers
> writing on intersections of gender, race, religion and community.
>
> Due to generous support from the PG/ECR Node of the ARC Cultural
> Research Network, we are pleased to announce a program to support
> Postgraduate and Early Career Researchers in developing publication
> outcomes from their participation in the 'Not another hijab row'
> conference (details and CFP below).
>
> The ECR/PG program includes:
>
> - a publications workshop in conjunction with the conference
> - a partnering system to put ECRs and PGs in contact with others in
> their area of research.
> - mentoring from senior researchers
>
> The workshop and mentoring are designed to support participants in
> developing their papers for publication in a special edition of the
> refereed ejournal Trans/forming Cultures.
>
> Postgraduates and Early Career Researchers interested in taking part in
> the publication support program should contact tanja.dreher at uts.edu.au
> <mailto:tanja.dreher at uts.edu.au>
>
> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>
> CALL FOR PAPERS
>
> Not another hijab row: New conversations on gender, race, religion and
> communities
>
> A national conference sponsored by Trans/forming Cultures: Key Centre
> for Communication and Culture, UTS
>
> Sunday, 10 December 2006
> University of Technology, Sydney
>
> Despite a decade of 'race debates' in Australia, analyses of the
> intersections between gender, race and religion remain all but absent in
> the public sphere. In recent years Muslim women in particular have been
> subjected to intense public scrutiny, yet these controversies have
> largely been limited to provocative comments on the hijab and sharia
> law. Such narrow debates have served to silence the experiences and the
> concerns of Muslim women and of scholars and community workers who
> engage the intersections of gender, race and religion.
>
> This conference seeks to establish a space for constructive dialogue
> around the perspectives which are marginalised in public discussions,
> focusing on how gender, race and religion shape notions of belonging and
> exclusion in Australia. Ideas around gender, race and religion have long
> been deployed in the construction of Australian national identity, and
> are particularly evident in current representations of 'aggressive' and
> 'misogynistic' Islam as the ultimate alien other in 'tolerant'
> Judeo-Christian Australia. In minority communities, questions over
> community leadership, representation, and responses to racism have often
> revolved around constructions of culture, faith and gender roles.
>
> The organisers seek papers and presentations from all disciplinary
> perspectives in order to build a conversation across spectra of belief,
> scholarship and community. Rather than another 'hijab debate', the
> conference will explore the intersections of gender, race and religion
> in regards to:
>
> - public space and public safety
> - health, housing and education
> - security and belonging
> - employment and unemployment
> - social inclusion and exclusion
> - media and public debate
> - the dynamics of community
> - the politics of representation
> - advocacy and activism
> - feminisms
> - nationalism and national identity
> - 'law and order' and representations of crime
>
> Full papers may be submitted following the conference for inclusion in a
> refereed publication.
>
> Deadline for abstracts: Monday 31 July. Please send 200 word abstracts
> and a brief biographical note to tanja.dreher at uts.edu.au
> <mailto:tanja.dreher at uts.edu.au>
>
> For more information, contact
>
> * Dr Tanja Dreher: tanja.dreher at uts.edu.au
> <mailto:tanja.dreher at uts.edu.au>, 02-9514-2757 or
> * Dr Christina Ho: christina.ho at uts.edu.au
> <mailto:christina.ho at uts.edu.au>, 02-9514-1946
>
> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>
> Following 'Not another hijab row':
>
> ACRAWSA conference BORDER POLITICS OF WHITENESS
>
> 11 - 13 December, 2006
>
> http://www.ccs.mq.edu.au/borderpolitics/index.html
>
> +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
>
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