Book Life
Print Culture and the Public Sphere
An International Conference in the Humanities and Social Sciences March 20-
22, 2008
Malmö University, Sweden
Confirmed Keynote speakers:
Dipesh Chakrabarty
_Provincializing Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference_
Nancy Armstrong
_How Novels Think: The Limits of British Individualism from 1719-1900_
Nancy Fraser
_Redistribution or Recognition? A Political-Philosophical Exchange_
Walter Benn Michaels
_The Shape of the Signifier: 1967 to the End of History_
The public sphere is an imagined, common space where members of society
come together to debate matters of interest and to establish consensus
about them. So fundamental is this space that it has even been argued to
define western modernity. Because of the historical significance of the
book in the public sphere, books have acquired the status of powerful
catalysts for cultural practices. Books are in this sense templates for
understanding the self and the world.
Recently, there has been a return to the idea of book culture as a leading
culture for the protection and dissemination of civic virtues and moral
mores. Governments and policymakers turn to book culture to formulate
social and cultural hierarchy. These thoughts are being raised in an
unfortunate connection to increased migration, particularly from Africa
and the Middle East.
How is reading and writing related to notions of self-understanding, both
collectively and individually? How is the book a catalyst for certain
cultural practices? How is the book related to changes in modern social
and political practices? How is modernity an effect of the imagined public
sphere?
Conference web site: http://www.mah.se/templates/Page____56073.aspx
Please send proposals for papers and panels to:
booklife_at_imer.mah.se
Deadline for panel proposals: October 21, 2007
Deadline for paper proposals: November 21, 2007
CONFERENCE TOPICS COULD INCLUDE:
The book and the public sphere
The book in the age of global migration
The globalization of the book
The book and democracy
The book and empire
The book and social/cultural practices
Books, discipline, didactics
Beyond books
Books and media technology
Books and intermedialization
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Received on Mon Aug 06 2007 - 04:14:59 EDT
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