Center for 21st Century Studies launches student blog

From Michelle Caswell, Editor with the Center for 21st Century Studies:

“The Center is pleased to announce the launch of a new student blog chronicling last week’s successful conference, Since 1968.

Please visit http://21stcenturystudies.wordpress.com/ for student perspectives on the conference, including panel recaps, current responses to past youth movements, and an ode to the Center for 21st Century Studies.

We encourage you to read, comment, and participate in this new online community.”

CFP Deadline Extended

The deadline for the 2009 Midwest Interdisciplinary Graduate Conference has been extended to November 15, 2008. Please e-mail your submission to
Graduate Conference at UWM

Third Annual Graduate Conference in Comparative Studies-Ohio State University

*Third Annual Graduate Student Conference in Comparative Studies*

Hosted by the Department of Comparative Studies

http://comparativestudies.osu.edu

The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH USA

16 January 2009

*The Body in Pain and Pleasure*

As our lives are increasingly characterized by disembodied and mediated experiences, how is it that the individual comes to know pain and pleasure? For the person in pain, Elaine Scarry famously argues, “‘having pain’ may come to be thought of as the most vibrant example of what it is to ‘have
certainty,’ while … hearing about pain may exist as the primary model of what it is ‘to have doubt.’” In other words, she argues that certainty is contingent upon the experiential reality of the body. Though Scarry is specifically addressing pain in the context of torture here, this same logic might be extended to pleasure – that to ‘have certainty’ of pleasure necessitates embodied experience.  In terms of seeking certainty, Aristotle noted in *Nicomachean Ethics* “bodily pleasures are pursued by people who are incapable of experiencing other pleasures.”  In an age, however, when individuals are increasingly divorced from their bodies, how are pain and pleasure known or understood?

To this end, we are seeking graduate student papers that look to address the body in pain and pleasure from a variety of (inter)disciplinary perspectives. We welcome projects that consider the following topics or others, as they illuminate our inquiry:

·         Biopolitics and governmentality
·         History and historiography
·         Nation, state, and nation-state
·         Religion
·         Art, film, and literature
·         Theatre and dance
·         Popular culture
·         Pornography and erotica
·         Trauma
·         The family
·         Psychoanalysis
·         Gender and sexuality
·         Substance and substance abuse
·         Terror and terrorism
·         Crises and disasters
·         Performance
·         Philosophy and ethics
·         BDSM
·         Environmentalism
·         Technology
·         Race
·         Illness, medicine, and death
·         Justice and the law
·         Sport and exercise

Please send 250-word abstracts for individual 20-minute papers (or panels of 3-4 presenters) to compstudiesconference@gmail.com. The deadline for submissions is November 10th, 2008.  Accepted applicants will be notified by November 30th.  In the body of the e-mail, please include the following information:

Presenter(s) name(s):
Institutional affiliation(s):
Level of graduate study:
Title of paper:
Contact information: