[csaa-forum] Call for Papers: 'Minor Culture' CSAA Conference 2015
Jon Stratton
jon_stratton22 at outlook.com.au
Sat Mar 21 18:15:52 ACST 2015
Dear Rimi and Timothy,
Thank you for organising this conference and for the splendid list of speakers. My apologies for not having attended the annual conferences recently. If I had I may already know the answer to my concern. It is that all the speakers, with one exception, come from universities in Sydney and Melbourne--unless there are some changes in affiliation of which I am not aware. To put it differently, there are, I think, no speakers listed from Adelaide, Perth, Darwin, or, with the very honourable exception of Graeme Turner, from Brisbane. Nor are any speakers listed from Aotearoa/New Zealand. This makes the conference appear terribly Sydney/Melbourne-centric. I am sure that the two of you, with degrees from a Perth uni and an Adelaide uni, can aapreciate how this feels to those of us who live and work outside of the traditional core nexus. This seems to me an issue of particular relevance given the exciting topic of the conference. Minor Culture, related to matters of place, identity and marginality, are of great importance to those of us in places still identified as peripheral to the old Australian core. Is there a reason that I don't know about why the conference has been configured in such a traditional and exclusive a way?
To remind list members of a small portion of a complex and diverse history; Perth figured large in the early development of Cultural Studies in Australia not least because the city's historically marginal status in Australia replicated the early concerns of Cultural Studies with marginality. The Australian Journal of Cultural Studies was founded in Perth. The journal's home subsequently shifted to the United States and it became the journal we know of as Cultural Studies. Continuum: Journal of Media and Cultural Studies, which I believe still has a link with CSAA, was founded in Perth and its senior editor still works in Perth.
With best wishes,
Jon
From: timothy.laurie at unimelb.edu.au
To: csaa-forum at lists.cdu.edu.au
Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2015 02:06:39 +0000
Subject: [csaa-forum] Call for Papers: 'Minor Culture' CSAA Conference 2015
Call
for Papers:
MINOR CULTURE
Conference of the Cultural Studies Association of Australasia, Dec 1-Dec 3, 2015
Minor Culture
creates a space for inter-disciplinary dialogues around the study of
place, identity and marginality, and addresses research on everyday cultural productions and media texts, cultural policy and discourses of sustainability, digital life and creative industries, and public cultures in the Asia-Pacific region. The conference
also invites responses to the following questions:
·
How are minor cultures inhabited? When do minor cultures become
uninhabitable?
·
Is the concept of minority still useful in explaining contemporary
forms of cultural marginality?
·
How do categories such as indigeneity and Aboriginality, gender
and sexuality, class, disability, race and citizenship produce minoritising effects? How might these categories change when mobilised through governmental discourses, newsmedia, and everyday usage?
·
Who narrates experiences of minoritisation? For whom are these
narratives produced? How is minoritarianism articulated through film, music, television, literature, performance, and digital cultures?
·
In what ways do practices of government and cultural policy
shape relationships between local, national and transnational cultures? To what extent are legal regulations implicated in the formation of minoritarian practices?
·
How do new minor or major cultural formations emerge? Through
which means do political practices resist or intervene in these formations?
·
Do minor cultures require novel theoretical tools or research
methodologies? What do experimental approaches to cultural research look like? What alternative kinds of knowledge could such approaches make available?
·
Is minority a humanist concept? What place could majority and
minority have within post-anthropocentric thinking?
·
And when do minor cultures cease to be minor?
Time & Location
University of Melbourne, Parkville Campus
Nov. 30: Prefix Postgraduate Day (incl. workshops on theory and methodology from senior cultural studies researchers)
Dec 1-3
Minor Culture conference
Keynote Speakers
Distinguished Professor Ien Ang (Professor of Cultural Studies,
Institute for Culture and Society)
Professor Jose Neil C. Garcia (Professor
of English, Creative Writing and Comparative Literature at the University of the Philippines Diliman, Quezon City)
Professor Meaghan Morris (Professor
of Gender & Cultural Studies, University of Sydney)
Invited speakers also include
Dennis Altman, Tony Bennett, Catherine Driscoll, Ghassan Hage, Koichi Iwabuchi, Peter Jackson, Stephen Muecke, Greg Noble, Elspeth Probyn, Katrina Schlunke,
and Graeme Turner.
Abstracts
Please send an abstract (250 words max), a title for the presentation (15 min max), and a short bio (30 words max) including your name, email address, degree level
and institutional affiliation to: csaa2015 at lists.unimelb.edu.au
(both in the body of the email and as an attachment) by June 1, 2015.
Presenters will be notified of their acceptance no later than July 1.
Conference Co-convenors
Dr. Rimi Khan & Dr. Timothy Laurie (Screen & Cultural Studies, University of Melbourne)
Conference Organising Committee at the University of Melbourne
Assoc. Prof. Chris Healy (Screen & Cultural Studies)
Assoc. Prof. Fran Martin (Screen & Cultural Studies)
Assoc. Prof. Scott McQuire (Media and Communications)
Professor Angela Ndalianis (Screen & Cultural Studies)
Professor Nikos Papastergiadis (Director of the Research Unit in Public Cultures)
Assoc. Prof. Audrey Yue (Screen & Cultural Studies)
Feel free to email any questions about the conference to
csaa2015 at lists.unimelb.edu.au
Website URL tbc, but for general information about CSAA, see www.csaa.asn.au
Dr. Timothy Laurie |
Lecturer in Cultural Studies
Room 237
John Medley Building
The School of Culture and Communication
THE UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE
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