



April 9-10, 2010 at Texas Tech University in
Lubbock, Texas, U. S. A.
Texas Tech University houses the internationally known Southwest
Collections and the Vietnam Archives. Spring in Lubbock is mild and
sunny.
Keynote Speakers:
Eva Cherniavsky, Department of English, University of Washington
Colleen Lye, Department of English, University of California at Berkeley
Walter Mignolo, Department of Literature, Duke University
Donald Pease, Department of English, Dartmouth College
Art
Exhibition:
Margarita Cabrera,
Mexican artist living in El Paso, “US Immigration Policy and Maquiladora
Practices”
Joomi Chung, Korean artist resident in Miami, Ohio, “Installation Art
about South Korean-U.S. Relations”
Scott Townsend, U.S. visual artist in Raleigh, North Carolina,
“Interactive Installation and Film on ‘Border Relations’”
Qingsong Wang, Chinese photographer based in Shanghai,
“Photography and the Consumerist Invasion of China”
Proposal Submission Deadline: January 18, 2010
American Studies as transnational practice not only raises questions on
the changing roles that the United States has played as a great power in
the global arena since the late nineteenth century, but also calls
attention to its own disciplinary premises, interests, and imaginaries
in relation to area studies and comparative literature. As American
Studies has recently intervened in U.S. exceptionalism and neoliberal
capitalism in its critique of discourses that vary from “manifest
destiny” to “market democracy,” it also foregrounds its own formation as
a product of the Cold War and its renewed influence in the
post-socialist regimes in China, Russia, and East Europe. Meanwhile,
with new paradigm shifts in transnational and global studies that
encompass transoceanic, hemispheric, and planetary consciousness, how
does American Studies negotiate and reconfigure its own field
imaginaries and boundaries? If Hemispheric Studies highlights the issue
of “the Americas,” how would its critical disposition “provincialize”
American Studies? If the westward movement was central to
U.S. nation-building and the national imaginary, how do the generations
of Mexican presence in the Southwest as well as more recent northward
migrations of Latinos/as impact the U.S. consciousness as simultaneously
old and new national narratives?
If Trans-Atlantic movements have
informed and reshaped U.S. literary, cultural, and historical
experiences, then what new possibilities would Trans-Pacific movements
pose for American Studies in the twenty-first century? What are the new
opportunities and challenges if we reconsider U.S. literature, history,
and culture in planetary terms?
This
symposium invites presentations that investigate the theory and praxis
involving American Studies in transnational contexts at various
historical junctures, and seeks projects that explore specific cases in
U.S. history, literature, and culture with global dimensions and
implications. We welcome proposals that examine American Studies from
U.S. regional locales and global sites as well as abstracts that
reconsider U.S. historical and cultural experiences in transnational and
planetary frameworks.
Topics may include but are not restricted to the following:
--
Rethinking the Boundaries among American Studies, Area Studies, and
Comparative Literature
-- Empire, Race, and Trans-Atlantic Studies
-- Race, Gender, and Class in Transnational American Studies
-- The Local and the Global in Trans-Pacific Studies
-- Borderland, Natural Environment, and Planetary Consciousness
-- Border Crossing and Critical Cosmopolitanism
-- Border Literature, Chicano/a Theory, and Hemispheric Studies
-- American Studies and Post-socialism in China, Russia, and Eastern
European Countries
-- The Trans-Pacific Movement of Asians in Diaspora
-- Wall Street and the Future of “Market Democracy”
-- Westward Movement and U.S. Southwestern Literature
-- Colonialism and Neocolonialism in Asia, Africa, and Latin America
-- Global and Local Wars: Displacement, Migration, and Expulsion
-- The Vietnam War and Vietnamese in Diaspora
-- Transnational Feminist and Queer Studies
-- Postcolonial Studies and beyond
-- The Role of Spanish in American Studies
--
Transnational Cinema
Please send your one-page proposal and one-page C.V. by January 18,
2010:
Dr.
Yuan Shu
Department of English
P.O.
Box 43091
Texas
Tech University
Lubbock, TX 79409-3091
You
may email your inquiry, proposal, and C.V. to Dr. Yuan Shu at (yuan.shu@ttu.edu).
Symposium information will be available on our website:
http://english.ttu.edu/complit/.