UPDATE: Queer Times, Diasporic Spaces (9/20; ACLA, 4/20/01-4/22/01)

From: Jana Evans Braziel (evans_braziel@hotmail.com)
Date: Fri Sep 01 2000 - 11:34:43 EDT

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    "Queer Times, Diasporic Spaces, Perverse Aesthetics"

         [Proposed Special Session at the ACLA Annual Conference 2001
               "Topos/Chronos": Aesthetics for a New Millennium]

    EXTENDED DEADLINE:
    September 20, 2000 (Please direct queries to braziel.jana@uwlax.edu).

    NOTE:
    PAPERS MAY ADDRESS DIASPORIC ISSUES, QUEER ISSUES OR (IDEALLY) BOTH

    Mapping the theoretical and spatiotemporal intersections (or disjunctures)
    of queer times and diasporic spaces (or the "histories" and "topographies"
    of gender, ethnicity, sexuality, race within a transnationalist frame), this
    panel proposes a critical examination of recent interventions in Queer and
    Diasporic Studies around issues of space, time, and embodiment (particularly
    as such interventions confound material/aesthetic dichotomization). One
    objective of the panel is to historicize (and politicize) constructions of
    gender, sexuality and spatiality, mapping the imbricated cartographies of
    nationalism, gender, sexuality and territorial boundaries.

    Papers could address theorizations of space-time in Elizabeth Grosz’s Space,
    Time and Perversion; Judith Butler’s Bodies That Matter; Cynthia Patton and
    Benigno Sanchez-Eppler’s Queer Diasporas; or theorizations of queerness and
    diaspora in relation to nation-states and transnationalism by scholars such
    as David Eng, Gayatri Gopinath, Jasbir Puar, Martin Manalansan, José Esteban
    Muñoz, Robert Schwartzwald and others.

    Papers could also explore cultural, artistic, literary or aesthetic
    representations of queer times, diaspora spaces, queer spaces, diasporic
    times, or any variant of queer or diasporized spatiotemporal borders. Other
    suggestions include: the spaces/s-time/s of sex acts and diasporic
    movements; sex and migration; sexual migration; queer bodies; diasporic
    bodies; queer and/or diasporic aesthetics; perverting aesthetics; queer
    ethics, diasporic ethics, and an-aesthetics.

        DEADLINE:
    Send 2-page paper abstract and a brief c.v. by September 20, 2000 to: Jana
    Evans Braziel, 431I North Hall, Department of English, University of
    Wisconsin-La Crosse, 1752 State Street, La Crosse, WI 54601.

    Abstract and c.v. may also be faxed or sent electronically:
    FAX (608) 785-8301; evans_braziel@hotmail.com or braziel.jana@uwlax.edu.

        ABOUT ACLA 2001:
    "'Topos/Chronos': Aesthetics for a New Millennium," ACLA 2001 Conference is
    sponsored by the
    University of Colorado, Boulder. April 20-22, 2001.
    The ACLA Conference follows a seminar format with 12+ papers organized
    around a common theme.
    or point of inquiry; the seminar meets for 2-3 days. Concurrent seminars
    and sessions are
    held in the morning and in the afternoon. For more information on the ACLA
    Conference see:
    http://www.colorado.edu/comparativeliterature/acla2001/

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