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Aktuelles Call for Papers

CfP: Indigenous Popular Culture Across the Globe: An Edited Collection

Editors: Svetlana Seibel and Kati Dlaske

The proposed volume seeks to bring together researchers and practitioners of Indigenous popular culture in order to illustrate the cultural vibrancy, complexity, and importance of this emerging field. We therefore invite contributions from academics as well as artists, entrepreneurs, event organizers, cos players etc. Contributions may focus on any aspect of Indigenous popular culture in any of the geographic areas throughout the globe.
Academic articles should be 6000-8000 words in length. Contributions by practitioners of Indigenous popular culture can be of artistic/creative/analytical/(self)reflexive nature and allow for wider variation in scope, i.e. could be as short as one page (text, comic strip, image, etc.).

Submission deadline: Dec. 31, 2018.

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Aktuelles Call for Papers

CfP: Indigenous Literary Arts of Truth and Redress: A Gathering of the Indigenous Literary Studies Association

Unceded xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam) Territory, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, 3-5 June 2019

The Indigenous Literary Studies Association invites scholars, knowledge-keepers, writers, artists, and community members to reconsider dominant discourses of reconciliation through explorations of Indigenous literatures as literatures of truth, reformation, reclamation, resurgence, and redress. This conference seeks to animate “redress” as the missing word between truth and reconciliation in Canada. Without redress, reconciliation will remain a vague, imagined ideal of a happy, inclusive country where “sharing” means that nothing changes for either Indigenous peoples or non-Indigenous Canadians. We are at a moment in time when talk about reconciliation proliferates while truth continues to go missing in numerous discursive arenas (corporations, governments, education systems). We suggest that between truth and reconciliation is a gap that can only be overcome by the restoration of and compensation for lands and resources stolen from Indigenous peoples. Beyond land and treaty rights, Indigenous sovereignty, languages, and kinship affiliations need to be restored. Indeed, some of the most vibrant invocations of Indigenous self-determination and calls to action come from our literary arts.

The Indigenous Literary Studies Association welcomes participants to consider truth, sovereignty, and redress in connection to Indigenous writings in their multiple and expansive dimensions, including discussions of literature, film, theatre, performance, storytelling, song, hip-hop, and other forms of narrative expression. We support diverse modes of creating
and disseminating knowledge. Prospective participants are invited to propose conference papers, panels, roundtables, workshops, performances, and other formats for special sessions. Panel sessions will be 90 minutes in duration, including at least 15 minutes for questions and discussion. In keeping with our desire to enable dialogue and community-based learning, we welcome session proposals that utilize non-standard or alternative formats.

Submission deadline: Jan. 15, 2019.

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Aktuelles Call for Papers

Call for Submissions: International Journal of Canadian Studies

The International Journal of Canadian Studies is a bilingual, multidisciplinary, and peer-reviewed journal featuring the latest research in the field of Canadian Studies. Articles from IJCS have been cited more than 1,500 times and downloaded over 9,000 times in the last three years. The IJC Editorial board invites a broad range of topics and approaches in the study of Canada, including essays using comparative methods or multi-/interdisciplinary perspectives as well as proposals for special theme issues, based on conferences or with a Call for Papers.

Both the IJCS editors and editorial board welcome academics at any stage of their career, from Canada and beyond, to explore any aspect of the study of Canada. IJCS publishes full-length articles based on primary research. All submissions must undergo peer review and final decisions regarding publication are made by the Editorial Board. Visit http://bit.ly/IJCS_Submissions for more information regarding submissions to IJCS, including guidelines for submission.

The International Journal of Canadian Studies is available online at IJCS Online and Project MUSE.

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Aktuelles Neuerscheinungen

New Publication: Fugitive Borders: Black Canadian Cross-Border Literature at Mid-Nineteenth Century

by Nele Sawallisch

Fugitive Borders explores a new archive of 19th-century autobiographical writing by black authors in North America. For that purpose, Nele Sawallisch examines four different texts written by formerly enslaved men in the 1850s that emerged in or around the historical region of Canada West (now known as Ontario) and that defy the genre conventions of the classic slave narrative. Instead, these texts demonstrate originality in expressing complex, often ambivalent attitudes towards the so-called Canadian Promised Land and contribute to a form of textual community-building across national borders. In the context of emerging national discourses before Canada’s Confederation in 1867, they offer alternatives to the hegemonic narrative of the white settler nation.