CFP: Deadline Alert! Northwestern University Graduate Student Conference, “Radical Intersections: Performance Across Disciplines”

*CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS
**Radical Intersections: Performance Across Disciplines
An Interdisciplinary Graduate Student*

Submission Deadline:December 7, 2008
Conference Dates: April 24-26, 2009

Northwestern University’s Department of Performance Studies invites
proposals from graduate students whose research uses performance as theory,
method, or praxis to join us for panel presentations, performances, and
sustained dialogue. We also encourage proposals from graduate students from
across the social sciences and humanities whose research concerns cultural
performances, performance events, or performativity in everyday life.

Radical Intersections aims to interrogate junctures at which dissimilar ways
of being, doing, and thinking rub against one another. Such junctures have
the potential to disturb foundational concepts and disciplinary assumptions.
As Dwight Conquergood wrote, “Our radical move is to turn, and return,
insistently, to the crossroads.” With performance theory gaining currency in
a variety of disciplines, and performance studies itself interdisciplinary
in its subjects, methods, and analytics, performance scholars often inhabit
such crossroads. Graduate students, as the next generation of the academy,
would do well to pause at our present junctures and explore possible
directions. What choices do performance studies scholars face today, and
where should our scholarship go from here?

Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
• How do collaborations of performance studies with particular disciplines,
sites, or public conversations provoke “radical” scholarship?
• Figuring the human body as a complex and dynamic site of radical
intersections of race, class, gender, sex, and sexuality;
• Queer bodies and queer spaces; communicating “trans” movements,
ontologies, and aesthetics;
• Going public: taking scholarship into the public, into pedagogy, and
translating scholarship into performance;
• Taking up space: finding, creating, and claiming space for our work;
• Collisions and collaborations of performance studies with cultural
studies, anthropology, theatre studies, ethnography, media studies, studies
of embodiment, and other fields;
• Making the comfortable uncomfortable: controversial subject matter, acts
of remembering, and using the body to enact scholarship and analyze culture;
• Creating rigorous scholarship while working from a place of feeling and
affect;
• “Performance anxiety” both within and out the discipline over
performance’s applications, its institutionalization, and its radical
potential;
• In a discipline that resists strict definition, where do our tensions lie?
What prevents us from doing particular kinds of work?

We welcome competitive proposals for individual papers as well as panels not
exceeding four presenters. Please submit a 300-400 word abstract and a short
CV or bio to Radical Intersections by Dec 7. (Proposals
for panels should include individual and panel abstracts.) Notices of
acceptance will be sent in mid-January.

CFP: McGill-Queens Graduate Student Conference in History

McGill-Queen’s Graduate Student Conference in History
13-14 March 2009, Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada

The Departments of History at Queen’s University and McGill University invite proposals for the sixth annual McGill-Queen’s Student Conference in History. The intention of the conference is to bring together Masters and Doctoral students working in a wide variety of fields in order to foster discussion in an interdisciplinary and bilingual environment. We encourage submissions from students working in all historical periods and geographical areas. The theme of the conference is ‘Forward Through the Rearview Mirror? Re-assessing History as a Medium.’

Our keynote speaker will be Dr. A.B. McKillop, Chancellor’s Professor and Chair of the Department of History at Carleton University. He is the author of several books on cultural and intellectual history, including A Disciplined Intelligence: Critical Inquiry and Canadian Thought in the Victorian Era, The Spinster and the Prophet: Florence Deeks, H.G. Wells, and the Mystery of the Purloined Past, and Pierre Berton: A Biography. His talk, entitled ‘Engaging History: Historians, Storytelling, and Self,’ deals with the oldest form of history as medium—storytelling and historians’ relationship to it.

Proposals must not exceed 500 words, be accompanied by a short biographical statement, and include a phone number through which potential presenters may be contacted by the conference committee. Proposals may be submitted in either French or English. The deadline for submissions is December 7th, 2008. Those submitting proposals are encouraged to suggest possible themes for conference panels, and indicate whether they are interested in chairing panels.

Please send proposals via email (*.rtf; *.doc; or *.wpd) to Us . Or via post to:

McGill-Queen’s Graduate Student Conference in History
Queen’s University, Department of History,
49 Bader Lane
John Watson Hall, rm. 212
Kingston, ON, K7L 3N6
Fax: 613-533-6298

As we are interested in exploring the nature, variety, complexity, and relevance of contemporary historical practice, we encourage a broad interpretation of the conference theme from a variety of fields and backgrounds. Possibilities include (but are by no means limited to):

Gender and Sexuality
Social History
Cultural and Intellectual History
The History of Medicine
Postcolonial History
Political History
Indigenous Peoples and Cultures
The History of Childhood, Youth, and Adolescence
Historiography and Historical Method
Labour History
The History of Science and Technology
Public Memory
Educational History
The History of the Body
Military History
Environmental History
Legal History

CFP: 7th Annual Wayne State University Graduate Student Conference, “Mirror, Mirror on the Wall,” Interdisciplinary Approaches to Reflections

Call for Papers
7th Annual Graduate Student Conference

Theme: “Mirror, Mirror on the Wall” - Interdisciplinary Approaches to Reflections

Sponsored by the Classical and Modern Languages Graduate Forum
Wayne State University
Department of Classical and Modern Languages, Literatures, and Cultures

Conference Date:
Saturday, April 4, 2009
Submission Deadline for Abstracts:
Friday, January 16, 2009

When contemplating ourselves in a mirror we are confronted with our physical appearance. Although the mirror doesn’t lie, it doesn’t show us the entire picture either. Often how we feel about our appearance is predicated on how we perceive ourselves, and how others perceive us. Metaphorically, mirrors are not just objects of vanity but help us gain perspective, which we otherwise are not in a position to see. A mirror can only reflect an image, our face, our hands, our smile: but how do we perceive our internal countenance, our values, our fears, our memories? What tools do we use to perceive less concrete things such as culture, history and gender? How does language reflect our individually and collectively perceived reality? How do our experiences color our vision?
………………………………………………
Abstracts for 20 minute papers are welcome, and might include but are not limited to the following topics:

* defining and perceiving gender, historical, national/ethnic, linguistic identity *ideal vs. real identity *the individual as a reflection of a larger community *the psychological self *perceptions of beauty and cultural aesthetics *translation *historical perceptions and modern realities *mirror/illusion imagery in literature *the arts of reflecting/portraying the individual in film and the visual arts *reflections of space and “other” realities *reflections of genre

Submission Criteria
1. Abstracts and papers must be in English.
2. Abstracts must not exceed 200 words.
3. Abstracts must contain the following information: name of presenter, affiliation and status, mailing address, e-mail address, title of paper.
4. Presentation time limit 20 minutes (8 page maximum).

For further information and submissions, contact Sasha Pákh-Kelly here , or submit abstracts to http://www.linglist.org/confcustom/gsc7_wsu

CFP: 3rd Annual UC Davis Queer Studies Graduate Symposium “Queer Mobility, Queer Citizenship”

3rd Annual UC Davis Queer Studies Graduate Symposium
“Queer Mobility, Queer Citizenship”
University of California, Davis
May 29, 2009

Recent queer scholarship reflects an investment in studies of
transnationalism and a concern with questions of mobility and citizenship.
Scholarship within the growing field of transnational queer studies, as
exemplified in works such as Social Text’s 2005 special issue “What’s Queer
about Queer Studies Now” and GLQ’s 2008 special issue “Queer/Migrations,”
investigates the imbrications of gender and sexuality with racial, national,
and diasporic formations; circuits of travel, migration, and displacement;
and immigration, asylum, and citizenship policies. To interrogate discourses
of sexuality, desire, and political change within the current phase of
globalization, transnational queer studies requires attention to the ways in
which constructions of sexuality are linked to the movements of bodies,
ideas, and capital as well as to local, regional, and global systems of
inclusion and exclusion. This conference emerges at a moment in which
technologies of war and information simultaneously transcend and reinscribe
modern boundaries of time and space. Therefore, we invite conversations
around how queer modes of mobility and citizenship may be at once complicit
with and disruptive of the temporal, spatial, and affective logics of
nation-states, economic formations, and liberal personhood.

What does the study of mobility and citizenship offer queer scholarship? Who
is denied or granted access to various forms of mobility? How is that
access/denial contingent upon and constitutive of one’s citizenship status?
When and how are non-normative genders and non-reproductive desires in
synchrony with the state and when do they expose the fissures,
inconsistencies, and ambivalences of the state? Is queerness compatible with
the pursuit of liberal citizenship and is queer citizenship possible? How
does a focus on mobility and citizenship further demonstrate the necessity
of interrogating the racial, class, and gendered formations inherent in
discourses of sexuality? How can considerations of different scales of
mobility and forms of embodiment bring together studies of sexuality,
dis/ability, and citizenship? How are metaphors of mobility (coming out,
“fluid” identities, access) central to queerness? What are the links between
citizenship and in/voluntary modes of travel, im/migration, and
displacement?  How is the production of modern citizen-subjects embedded in
histories of colonialism, war, and empire-making, and what is particular
about the role of mobility in the construction of queer subjectivities? How
does queer fail or succeed as a transnational and translatable concept,
identity or politic?

We invite scholarship from a broad range of disciplines, especially
interdisciplinary work in queer theory and transgender theory. We especially
encourage work that critically engages mutually constitutive articulations
of race, class, sexuality, ability, gender, citizenship, religion, and
nationality. Papers engaging activism and community organizing are also
encouraged. For information on past symposium please visit
www.queersymposium.org.

Please send 250-500 word abstracts to queersymposium2009(AT)gmail.com by March
15, 2009.

Possible topics include (but are not limited to):
-Histories of queerness mobility and citizenship
-Gay/lesbian tourism and travel
-Immigration and asylum law
-Technology / digital and virtual spaces
-”Global Gay” / the gay international
-Embodiment/Disability Studies
-Queerness and mobile capital
-Border crossing and borderlands
-Violence, war, and the State
-Immobility/Stasis
-Local and regional belonging
-Temporal mobility, temporal belonging
-Affective and cultural citizenship
-Homonormativity, neoliberalism and mobile citizenship

Some True Stories: researches in the field of flexible truth: Storefront for Art and Architecture

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Some True Stories: researches in the field of flexible truth
Nov 18 2008 - Dec 23 2008
Change rarely follows sanctioned plot lines. Rather it often pivots around hoax, hyperbole and stray details. These phantom turning points are not easily taxonomized or moralized within orthodox political logics. We expect the right story—an epic binary tale of enemies and innocents, when it is often the wrong story—a little epidemic of rumor and duplicity—that rules the world.

Still, the fact that most pigs are wearing lipstick expands an activist repertoire!

Some True Stories is thrilled that two can play at this game. The research collected here considers a dissensus that is less self-congratulatory and less automatically oppositional but potentially more effective (and sneakier). Unlikely or outlying political evidence, with its fickle or underexplored logics, excites feelings of resourcefulness and ingenuity. Here is a large field of mongrel events and category leftovers—butterflies that are not pinned to the board because they do not reinforce expectations.

Architecture and urbanism contribute many wrong stories to the mix as they move headlong into the world, propagating forms of polity faster than proper political channels can legislate them. If the world spins around the actions of discrepant characters, architects, as classic facilitators of power, have long had a seat at the table.

Some True Stories happily swims in these dirty waters with all the other shills, butlers and go-betweens, looking for new points of leverage within the fictions and persuasions that we already have running through our fingers.

Hoax is design. The collection expels utopian prescriptions in favor of agility, ricochet and cultural contagion. It is attracted to spatial entrepreneurialism, unreasonable innovation, impure ethical struggles and obdurate problems that continually resist intelligence. We hope to spread rumors that the world has changed and to operation with all the guises and none of the disadvantages of truth.

Keller Easterling

Storefront for Art and Architecture
97 Kenmare Street
New York, NY 10012

Telephone 212.431.5795
Fax 212.431.5755
Email info@storefrontnews.org

Hours:
Tuesday - Saturday
11:00AM - 6:00PM
Closed Sunday and Monday.

Yes Men print fake New York Times

from BBC World News:

Pranksters print spoof NY Times


Front page of spoof paper

The spoof edition fooled many readers


A fake edition of the New York Times announcing the end of the Iraq war has been handed out to commuters in the US.

More than one million free copies of the 14-page “special
edition” newspaper were distributed, mainly in the cities of New York
and Los Angeles.

Another bogus story was about all Americans being given free healthcare.

A liberal group called the Yes Men, well known in the US for its
practical jokes, claimed responsibility for the elaborate prank.

The fake paper - dated 4 July 2009 - had a motto on its front page which read “all the news we hope to print”.

The hoax was accompanied by a website that mimicked the look of The New York Times’s real website.

A page of the spoof site contained links to dozens of liberal organisations, which were also listed in the print edition.

The fake edition surprised commuters, many of whom took the free copies thinking they were legitimate.

Later, the Yes Men issued a statement claiming responsibility.

“In an elaborate operation six months in the planning, 1.2
million papers were printed at six different presses and driven to
pre-arranged pick-up locations.”

The statement added that thousands of volunteers helped to distribute the fake edition.

A spokeswoman for the newspaper, Catherine Mathis, said: “This
is obviously a fake issue of The Times. We are in the process of
finding out more about it.”

Hotel and House Shares

Hello and welcome to the 2009 Midwest Interdisciplinary Graduate Conference at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Please feel free to use the comment feature on this page to communicate with other conference participants who may wish to set up hotel and house shares. Please let us know either via e-mail or comment if you would like to explore the option of staying with a graduate student at UWM; we will try our best to accommodate as many requests as possible.

-Andrew

Palin’s prank call from fake French president

updated 9:53 p.m. CT, Sat., Nov. 1, 2008

MONTREAL - Sarah Palin unwittingly took a prank call Saturday from a Canadian comedian posing as French President Nicolas Sarkozy and telling her she would make a good president someday.

“Maybe in eight years,” replies a laughing Palin.

The Republican vice presidential nominee discusses politics, the perils of hunting with Vice President Dick Cheney, and Sarkozy’s “beautiful wife,” in a recording of the call released Saturday and set to air Monday on a Quebec radio station. See link for full story.