Call for Papers:
‘Making it Work: US Thought and Culture between Practice and Paralysis’,
April 5th-6th 2013.
University of Michigan US Literatures and Cultures Consortium*
Deadline for Proposals - January 8th 2013 ( Notifications of acceptance by February 1st).
Keynotes:
Paul Taylor (Philosophy / African American and Diaspora Studies, Penn State):
author of Race: A Philosophical Introduction
Lisi Schoenbach (English, University of Tennessee Knoxville): author of Pragmati c Modernism
Are
there distinctively American attitudes toward objectivity and truth, judgment
and action? Two of the most enduring cliches about US culture are, first,
that its thought characteristically refuses universal grounds, and second, that
it privileges material practicality over theoretical or metaphysical
abstraction. Yet without universal grounds, how can we be convinced that
anything is worth doing? Let’s grant that it is; such a groundless
granting may initially let us act with a sense of freedom and unlimited
potential, but justifying or revising that action requires us to establish
provisional grounds that can themselves be hedged, negotiated, interrogated to
the paralyzing point of infinity. Which side of this tension to
prioritize—whether to elide contingencies and reduce deliberative friction or
to recuperate the experience of hesitancy and dwell in possibility—is a
governing question for distinctively American thinkers from Jonathan Edwards to
Audre Lorde, Emily Dickinson to Sidney Hook, Jane Addams to Timothy Leary.
With this interdisciplinary graduate conference, we, the US Literatures and Cultures Consortium at the University of Michigan, hope to foster cross-departmental discussion of questions like the following...
How
have objectivity, truth, rationality, and agency been represented and
conceptualized in US thought and culture? How have these models permitted
or circumscribed action? How have they informed individual and communal
practices: from action planned or spontaneous, to decision-making public or
private, to governance local and federal? What universalist appeals do
make their way into US culture? How are shared belief and/or knowledge
constructed, articulated, perpetuated, scrutinized and revised without
universalist guarantees? How have such modes of understanding interacted
and conflicted? How, essentially, have US philosophers, artists, politicians
and citizens forged justifications for acting and judging in a world without
universal grounds? And how and why have some of them found greater value
in resisting just this rush to action?
Such
questions might be addressed in relation to topics like, but not limited to,
the following:
-the US-ness of US thought
-living with contingency
-specific artworks, historical and cultural events
-pragmatism, neo-pragmatism and other anti- foundationalisms
-metaphysics and materialisms
-epistemology and situated knowledge
-processes of investigation and discovery
-concrete realities and social imaginaries
-agency, deliberation and decision
-methods of social representation
-models of the public realm
-modes of belief, religious and secular
-individual and communal obligations
-art and social change
-educational methodology
Abstracts of
up to 300 words for papers that will cast new light on these questions should
be submitted by email to usistconference2013@gmail.com
by January 8th 2013. We seek submissions from fellow graduate students in
any discipline, who work in any period of, and who take any approach to, US
Culture.
Accepted presenters will be notified by February 1st.
_____________________
*Ali Chetwynd, a PhD candidate in English at the University of Michigan and co-coordinator of Michigan's U.S. Literatures and Cultures Consortium, asked me to pass along this CFP, found at http://sitemaker.umich.edu/usists/conference_2013
- LDB
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