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Aktuelles Call for Papers

CfP: A Workshop in Transnational Feminism

L.R. Wilson Institute for Canadian History, McMaster University, May 10-12, 2018

Women have long organized across national borders, even before the current nation-state regime solidified. Activists have come together around issues including resistance to colonialism, struggles for national liberation, movements for social and economic justice, and other efforts to gain rights. As a field of study, transnational feminism emerged in the 1980s in response to a singular “global” feminism that erased differences within and between nations. While it underscores the emancipatory potential of inter-national networks and alliances for activist women, this scholarship also addresses the challenges to solidarity that arose from, among others, economic globalisation, (neo-)colonialism, and racism. It consequently uses multiple frameworks of difference, epistemologies, and methodologies to tackle the complexity of women’s lives and politics. Transnational feminism is a highly interdisciplinary field that seeks to disrupt national narratives and nation-oriented approaches while remaining attentive to differences among women within countries. In the Canadian context, transnational feminist analyses can be used, for example, to think about the country’s multinational realities where Indigenous, Diasporic, and Québécois feminisms each posed a distinct challenge, not only to hegemonic understandings of feminism but also to the nation-state.

Organized by the L.R. Wilson Institute for Canadian History at McMaster University, this two-day workshop will bring together scholars from Canada and around the world to address the methodological and epistemological challenges of writing transnational feminist histories. While this workshop is open to scholars in disciplines other than history, proposals from non-historians should indicate the ways in which their paper addresses questions of women’s activism in the 19thor 20th centuries from an historical perspective.

For further details, please see: http://bit.ly/2u9zIl7

Deadline for proposals: Sept. 30, 2017

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Aktuelles Call for Papers

CfP: Reinventing the Social: Movements and Narratives of Resistance, Dissension, and Reconciliation in the Americas

University of Coimbra, Portugal, 22-24 March 2018

The struggle over social issues and the resistance to ruling elites have a long history in the colonies and nations of the Americas. They range from wars of independence and slave uprisings to conventions for women’s rights, workers’ and peasants’ rebellions, indigenous movements, and protests against U.S. wars in Vietnam or in Iraq. Since World War II new forms of international and national inequalities and new dynamics in societies and in the media have increased our awareness of the many ways in which the social keeps being re-negotiated from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego.

Recent decades have been characterized by new approaches to time- and space-binding and mediational and relational webs of the social; the invention, invocation, and narration of tradition, history, and heritage serve as key elements in the creation of new social bonds with earlier generations; since the turn of the millennium formerly excluded social groups have been prominent in reshaping the scope and the normativity of the social; a diminishing civil society has opened space to the influence of extremisms; unemployed young people, deprived of prospects for the future, attempt new forms of expression and intervention; the disenfranchised take to the streets and to the Internet; social media open up new channels and formats for expression; literature raises consciousness for just causes; artists in every realm translate and give form to many of these thoughts and feelings; sociologists and political scientists bring up new interpretations of and theories on the social.

Whereas Justin Trudeau named the most diverse government in Canada’s history, the Indigenous president Evo Morales in Bolivia and the African-American former president of the U.S.A., Barack Obama, promoted multi- and pluricultural imaginaries and questioned social relations based on coloniality, while the ongoing discussion of Indigenous concepts such as “Buen vivir” revives and reveals more balanced relations between nature and society. Even if the hegemony of the U.S.A. in the Americas has been waning, the election of Donald Trump and his nostalgic vision of “Make America Great Again” will have global impacts, specifically on the Americas. In focus are also issues of immigration and the targeting of difference—be it racial, ethnic, religious, or gender—, the border wall with Mexico, immigration reform policies, the treatment of Muslim inhabitants, and the hosting of refugees, mostly from the Middle East, as well as feminist issues, environmental policies, and human rights in general. […]

Our purpose is therefore to explore past and present forms of intervention, relation, knowledge, translation, negotiation, solidarity, or alliance that promote the emancipation of those usually silenced by hegemonic formulae and hierarchies. Through the debate and exploration of new ground we aim at contributing to the designing of a new grammar and a new pedagogy of the social from epistemological and practical perspectives on the Americas.

For more information, please visit: http://www.interamericanstudies.net/?page_id=6447
Deadline for submissions: Aug. 31, 2017.

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Aktuelles Ausschreibungen

Call for Applications: Canada 150 Research Chairs

Competition opens for new Canada 150 Research Chairs Program offering more than $117 million to attract top international research talent

The Honourable Kirsty Duncan, Minister of Science, today launched the call for applications to the Canada 150 Research Chairs Program. The Minister is inviting the world’s scientists and scholars to apply to the new program and, if successful in their applications, bring their groundbreaking work to Canada. The investment of $117.6 million honours Canada’s 150th anniversary and was announced earlier this year in Budget 2017. The Canada 150 Research Chairs Program is designed to attract 15 to 35 internationally-based researchers and scholars to Canada, including Canadian expatriates who wish to return home. These researchers and scholars will bring their knowledge and expertise to universities across the country, and will help students train to become tomorrow’s professionals: the researchers, medical professionals, engineers, entrepreneurs and teachers whose contributions help build a better Canada and grow the middle class. The chairs are set for seven-year terms at two values: $350,000 per year and $1 million per year. The recruitment of these chairs is designed to be fast and will be guided by the Government of Canada’s commitment to equity and diversity. By opening the program to researchers from all disciplines, and at all career stages, the Government of Canada wishes to attract the brightest minds that will help further Canada’s reputation as a global centre of research excellence.

Further details about the program and how to apply: http://bit.ly/2vi92gG

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Aktuelles Call for Papers

CFP: 49th Algonquian Conference

Appel à communications-Congrès des Algonquinistes 

Oct 27 – 29, 2017 University of Montreal

Du 27 au 29 octobre 2017, l’Université de Montréal accueillera le 49e Congrès des Algonquinistes. Nous invitons toutes les personnes intéressées à soumettre des propositions en anglais, en français ou dans n’importe quelle langue algonquienne pour des communications sur tous les sujets en recherche algonquiniste. La durée des présentations sera de 20 minutes avec 10 minutes supplémentaires pour les questions. Les résumés doivent être de 300 mots maximum, excluant le titre et les références.

The 49th Algonquian Conference will take place from 27-29 October 2017 at the University of Montreal. We invite everyone interested to send proposals in English, French or any Algonquian language, for papers in all areas of Algonquian research. Presentations will be 20 minutes long followed by a 10-minute question period. Abstracts should be no more than 300 words in length, excluding title and references.

Further details
Deadline for submissions: Sept. 1, 2017.

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Aktuelles Neuerscheinungen

Neue Publikation: Teaching Canada – Enseigner le Canada

Teaching Canada – Enseigner le Canada

Herausgegeben von Marin Kuester, Claire Köhling, Sylvia Langwald und Albert Rau, Band 9 der Reihe Studies in Anglophone Literatures und Cultures (Serienherausgeber Prof. Dr. Martin Kuester) 

[de] Dieser Band stellt innovative und erfolgreiche Ansätze für kanadische Studien und kanadische Literatur vor, die auf beiden Seiten des Atlantischen Ozeans entwickelt wurden. Dazu gehören Best-Practice-Beispiele, in und für Universitäten und Gymnasien entwickelt, die häufig aus Kooperationsprojekten zwischen verschiedenen Ebenen der sekundären und tertiären Bildung entstanden sind. Die Themen der Beiträge sind so weit gestreut wie die Interessen der internationalen Kanada-Freunde: von Mordgeheimnissen bis hin zur Aufführung des kanadischen Dramas, über die kanadische und Québecer Sprache(n), Literatur, Musik, Politik und Geschichte bis zu „exotischen“ Themen wie Lebensmittel-Studien. [de/]

[en] This volume shows cases innovative and successful approaches to Canadian Studies and Canadian Literature developed on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. They include best-practice examples developed in and for universities and high schools, often evolved from cooperative projects between different levels of secondary and tertiary education. The topics of the contributions range as widely as the interests of the international community of Canadianists do: from murder mysteries to the performance of Canadian drama, from Canadian and Québécois language(s), literature(s), music, politics and history to “exotic” themes such as food studies. [en/]

Preis: 24,80 € bestellbar beim Verlag Wissner