CFP: Globalization (3/31/01; 10/18/01-10/20/01)

From: kenneth w harrow (harrow@msu.edu)
Date: Fri Dec 08 2000 - 16:19:43 EST

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    CALL FOR PAPERS

    Michigan State University’s 2001 Modern Literature Conference.
    GLOBALICITIES
    A Conference on Issues Related to Globalization
    Sponsored by the Program in Comparative Literature

    Date: October 18-20, 2001
    Location: Michigan State University

    Confirmed Keynote Speakers:
    -GAYATRI SPIVAK, Avalon Foundation Professor in the Humanities, Columbia
    University
    -MICHAEL HARDT, Associate Professsor of Literature and Romance Studies, Duke
    University
    -MAHMOOD MAMDANI, Herbert Lehman Professor of Government, Director, Institute
    of African Studies, Columbia University
    -SASKIA SASSEN, Professor of Sociology, The University of Chicago

    A number of recent, important works make clear that the present moment’s
    metaphor for the economic, political, social, and cultural interrelationships
    between nations is “globalization,” a concept that has come to replace
    earlier formulas of “modernization” and “civilization.” This conference,
    “Globalicities,” will focus on the limitations and implications of
    theoretically determining these relations.

    We are interested in reflections on the anthropological, sociological,
    economic, legal, linguistic, and aesthetical ways in which the “global” has
    been thought and actualized during the last 500 years. We particularly are
    soliciting serious investigations of the rhetorics and practices of recent
    theories of the global, postcolonial, and international. We hope that our
    neologism, “globalicities,” stands in relation to commonsense notions of the
    global in the same way that temporalities and historicities stand in relation
    to conventional time and history.

    In other words, our invitation is to treat the concept of the “globe” not as
    something given, but rather as something which is politically fashioned
    posterior to our always endless relations.

    Possible areas or topics include, but are not limited to:
    *Theories of Narrative and the global
    *Rethinking travel, exile, migration, diaspora
    *Mestizo logics; or, hybrid theory “all the way down”
    *“Development,” “modernization” and “civilization” and the fate of dependency
    theory
    *Race and gender in globalization theory
    *Post-structuralism and the critique of late-capitalism
    *Markets, profits, and violent conflicts
    *State violence, armed resistance, and limits of international law
    *The return of the state in global theory
    *The rhetorics of geography, space, and place theory
    *Questioning post-Marxism’s turn to “culture”
    *Subalternities and Solidarities
    *Markets, products and the construction of taste
    *Queering the sphere
    *Genetics, biotechnology and the globe

    Abstractions for individual papers should be no more than 500 words long;
    abstracts for panels are limited to a total of 1000 words. DEADLINE for
    Proposals: March 31, 2001

    Please send abstracts and one-page vita for each proposed panelist to:
    Professor Kenneth Harrow
    Director, Program in Comparative Literature
    Morrill Hall
    Michigan State University
    East Lansing, MI 48824
    fax 517 353 3755
    e-mail harrow@msu.edu

    xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

    As in past years, a selection of conference papers will be published by the
    Centennial Review, which in 2001 enters its 45th year of publication and
    interdisciplinary scholarship.

    The Program in Comparative Literature has hosted the Modern Literature
    Conference for many years. Recently the program has developed a special
    emphasis in African and the African diaspora studies, and the program serves as
    a complement to interdiscipinary Ph.D. programs in Michigan State University’s
    College of Arts and Letters, including the Literatures of the Americas and
    Postcolonial Studies, founded in 1998, and the Ph.D. program in Africa and the
    African-American Diaspora, which will be launched in Fall 2001.

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