[csaa-forum] CFP - Two Conferences on Utopia, Dystopia and Science Fiction at Monash, 5-7 December 2007
Andrew Milner
Andrew.Milner at arts.monash.edu.au
Mon Sep 3 08:26:34 CST 2007
Demanding the Impossible: The Third Australian Conference on Utopia,
Dystopia and Science Fiction
5th - 6th December 2007
A conference organised by the Centre for Comparative Literature and
Cultural Studies at Monash University
Keynote Speakers:
TERRY EAGLETON
Professor of Cultural Theory and John Rylands Fellow at the University
of Manchester.
TOM MOYLAN
Glucksman Professor of Contemporary Writing and Director of the Ralahine
Center for Utopian Studies, University of Limerick.
LYMAN TOWER SARGENT
Professor Emeritus of Political Science, University of Missouri, St.
Louis, and Visiting Fellow, Mansfield College, University of Oxford.
LUCY SUSSEX
Distinguished Australian science fiction writer and author of A Tour
Guide in Utopia.
Other Speakers will include:
Andrew Benjamin (Professor of Critical Theory, CCLCS), Roland Boer
(Associate Professor, CCLCS), Ian Buchanan (Professor of Critical
Theory, Cardiff University), Verity Burgmann (Professor of Politics,
University of Melbourne), Jacqueline Dutton (Senior Lecturer in French,
University of Melbourne), Andrew Milner (Professor of Cultural Studies,
CCLCS), Chris Palmer (Head of English, La Trobe University), Kate Rigby
(Associate Professor, CCLCS).
In December 2001 the University of Tasmania hosted a successful
conference around the theme of Antipodean Utopias. In December 2005,
Monash University hosted a second conference, around the theme of
Imagining the Future, to mark the long-awaited publication of
Archaeologies of the Future, Fredric Jameson's full-length monograph on
utopia and science fiction. In all, there were something like 90 papers
presented to this conference, including one by Jameson himself. This
third conference will return to the question of how we imagine the
future and whether such imaginings remain open to the unforeseeable.
Jameson famously concludes that utopia is `a meditation on the
impossible, on the unrealizable in its own right'. Hopefully, the
conference will play some small part in prompting similar such
meditations on the impossible.
Its keynote speakers will be: Terry Eagleton, whose recent publications
include After Theory, Sweet Violence and Holy Terror; Tom Moylan, author
of Demand the Impossible and Scraps of the Untainted Sky; Lyman Tower
Sargent, founding editor of Utopian Studies and co-editor of The Utopia
Reader; and Lucy Sussex, author of A Tour Guide to Utopia.
The conference invites papers from scholars, writers and others
interested in utopia, dystopia and science fiction.
Conference Abstracts:
Abstracts (approx. 100-150 words) should be sent by 30 September 2007 by
e-mail to
Utopias at arts.monash.edu.au
or by post to:
Utopias3 Conference,
Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies,
Building 11,
Clayton campus,
Monash University,
Victoria 3800,
AUSTRALIA.
Conference Proceedings:
Refereed proceedings of the conference will be published electronically
in the on-line journal Colloquy.
---
Intercultural Imaginaries of the Ideal: East-West Comparative Utopias
7 December 2007
Monash University
Utopia and utopianism are perceived to be primarily Western constructs —
Western dreams of a better world, an ideal existence or a fantastic
future. And it is true that the definitions, design and development of
utopian literatures and theories have emerged from Western examples of
the genre. Almost all cultures have foundation stories or myths
expressing an avatar of the Golden Age, such as the Garden of Eden in a
Judeo-Christian perspective or the Dreamtime in the Australian
Aboriginal worldview or the Pure Land of Eternal Happiness in ancient
Indian Buddhism, but whether or not there is concurrent or subsequent
development of utopian writings and practices in these cultures is still
a subject of debate. Until recently, much of the scholarship on the
subject has privileged the Western model of utopia, and it has been
proposed that the only country outside the West to produce a real and
ongoing utopian tradition is China. However, there is substantial
evidence to suggest that most cultures generate – if not utopias
corresponding to the Western design - then at least some representations
of an imaginary ideal place or time that do reflect similar
preoccupations to those observed in Western utopian writings and practices.
The aim of these special sessions on Comparative Utopias is to identify
generic tendencies as well as fundamental divergences in imagining the
ideal society across various cultural contexts. We invite proposals from
scholars who are working in utopian studies, but would also welcome
contributions from researchers in comparative mythology, cultural
anthropology, area studies, philosophy, comparative religions,
indigenous histories and any other relevant areas. Following on from the
Comparative Utopias workshop held at the University of Melbourne in
December 2005, we would like to extend the East-West focus of our
investigations to include expressions of imaginary societies and
projections from a wider range of cultures, such as African, Caribbean,
Islamic, Indian, Russian and Indigenous cultures of Australia, New
Zealand, the Pacific and the Americas. We will also continue to explore
non-Western utopian projections from Japan and China, as well as looking
further to Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand and beyond for examples.
Some suggestions for panels or workshops:
Archetypal Utopias – including those grounded in oral histories, popular
folklore, mythologies, religious texts
Utopia and Science Fiction - including futuristic fiction
(Re)defining “utopia” or the imaginary of the ideal society – for
broader application to cross-cultural examples, or with a particular
focus on certain cultures
Comparative chronologies of the development of the model for the ideal
society
Philosophical Utopias
Political Utopias
Social Utopias
It is envisaged that most papers will be of 20 minutes duration, but
proposals for workshop and round table discussions are also welcome.
Selected papers will be solicited for publication in a volume to be
edited by Gregory Claeys, Jacqueline Dutton and Lyman Tower Sargent.
Please send a 200 word abstract by email to Dr Jacqueline Dutton,
University of Melbourne : jld at unimelb.edu.au <mailto:jld at unimelb.edu.au>.
Your message should include your name, contact details, institutional
affiliation and discipline.
--
--
Professor Andrew Milner
Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies
Monash University
Melbourne
Victoria 3800
AUSTRALIA
Phone: (61) (3) 9905 2979
Fax: (61) (3) 9905 5593
Email: Andrew.Milner at arts.monash.edu.au
Homepage:
http://www.arts.monash.edu.au/cclcs/staff/milner/
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