CFPs, Events, Opportunities/Colloques, Appels à communication, évènements, opportunités
1.
See them and others on our website:
Consultez-les ou voyez toute la liste en visitant notre site web:
http://cas-sca.ca/fr/appel-de-communications
http://cas-sca.ca/call-for-papers
Thank you/Merci
- CFP Border thinking Gender in South Asia (and diaspora) for the Third World Thematics - Special Issue
https://cas-sca.ca/call-for-papers/10616-cfp-border-thinking-gender-in-south-asia-and-diaspora-for-the-third-world-thematics-special-issue
Events/Évènements-Other/Autres:
-Call for case studies: Critical Approaches to Gender in Mountain Ecosystems
-Faculty Mobility Program / Programme de mobilité enseignante
-cfp: international conference Canadian studies Bordeaux (France)- 'Because of Her?': Women and the Shaping of Canada / Colloque international/congrès de l'AFEC : « Grâce à elle(s) ? » : le rôle des femmes dans la construction du Canada
-[EASA 2018] Call for Lab Participants: 'The Conference as Sensorial Field Site'
- 2018 SUNTA Graduate Student Paper Prize Announcement: Submissions Due September 10, 2018
-EASA 2018: Call for Lab Participants - What to do with a Focus Group Discussion?!?
-Workshop IUAES 2018 - When academic lives go precarious
-Mind the Gap workshop
-IPPH (CIHR) / ISSP (IRSC) Funding Opportunities of Interest / Possibilités de financement d'intérêt
-Conference: Moving Centers & Traveling Cultures
-CFP: Extraterritoriality and Special Territorial Status Consequences and Outcomes
- Call for Paper Proposals - Beginnings
-CFP - Biometrics: Mediating Bodies
-CfP POEM Opening Conference "Participatory Memory Practices: Connectivities, Empowerment, and Recognition of Cultural Heritages in Mediatized Memory Ecologies." (13.-14.12.2018)
-CFP: Graphic Encounters conference - colonial print and Indigenous peoples
-(CFP) Empire & Tourism - International Multidisciplinary Congress (Lisbon, April 2019)
-IDRC invites applications for the IDRC Research Awards 2019 / Lancement de l'appel de la Bourse de recherche 2019 du CRDI
https://cas-sca.ca/call-for-papers/10648-idrc-invites-applications-for-the-idrc-research-awards-2019
-Call for Papers: TEXT/SOUND/PERFORMANCE: Making in Canadian Space, 25-27 April 2019
-New funding opportunity to support Canadian-African research teams studying Ebola / Une nouvelle possibilité de financement afin d'aider les équipes de recherche canado-africaines à étudier le virus Ebola
Events/Évènements-Other/Autres
CMNH PG Conference
Time, Memory and Conflict: Critical Approaches
Friday 6th July, 9:30am - 5pm, M2, Grand Parade, University of Brighton
An interdisciplinary, one-day conference at the University of Brighton
Research on the complex inter–relations between past, present and future in the time after political violence often leads us to question and push the boundaries of established theories and methods. Increasingly, work in this area reflects a critical awareness of the different modalities of time and memory within and across various post-conflict contexts. That being said, more can be done to further methodological and theoretical links between different approaches to studying time, memory and conflict. This can take the form of research into unexplored contexts, or critical reflections on established frameworks and debates.
Bringing together scholars from an array of different intellectual fields, this conference aims to encourage a set of conversations on how we might approach and understand the multi-directional interplay between experiences and representations of a 'past' that in many ways is not 'over', but which overshadows the present and complicates the imagining of the future. Key questions and areas of exploration are: What are the ethical and political commitments of research in post-conflict contexts? How does this research relate to questions of positionality? How might new research areas or critical reflections on established practical and theoretical approaches further our understanding of time, memory and conflict?
http://arts.brighton.ac.uk/research/cmnh/centre-events/postgraduate-conferences/time,-memory,-and-conflict-critical-approaches <redir.aspx?REF=ZmIACYRapckBvB5LJMw7GGI_qSa0yfxdz53MXG2dutcwywx9kdrVCAFodHRwOi8vYXJ0cy5icmlnaHRvbi5hYy51ay9yZXNlYXJjaC9jbW5oL2NlbnRyZS1ldmVudHMvcG9zdGdyYWR1YXRlLWNvbmZlcmVuY2VzL3RpbWUsLW1lbW9yeSwtYW5kLWNvbmZsaWN0LWNyaXRpY2FsLWFwcHJvYWNoZXM.>
Book a place:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/time-memory-and-conflict-critical-approaches-tickets-47417160002 <redir.aspx?REF=a5hsDstGW6EIWnWfDFBTxX14C5EiOSLryqdayMsNcPgwywx9kdrVCAFodHRwczovL3d3dy5ldmVudGJyaXRlLmNvLnVrL2UvdGltZS1tZW1vcnktYW5kLWNvbmZsaWN0LWNyaXRpY2FsLWFwcHJvYWNoZXMtdGlja2V0cy00NzQxNzE2MDAwMg..>
Keynote Address: Prof. Rebecca Bryant, University of Utrecht, Netherlands: 'Post-conflict Futures: Temporal Orientations After Catastrophe".
9.30 – 10.00 Registration
10.00 – 10.15 Welcome
10.15 – 11.45 Panel 1 – Representations of conflict pasts
Kasia Tomasiewicz (University of Brighton) 'Changing representation of the Second World War in the Imperial War Museum, London'
Marco Sottilotta (University of Rome) 'Contested Heritage and Regimes of Historicity. Past, Present and Future in the Kingdom of Buganda'
Ian Cantoni (University of Brighton) 'Spaces of liminality: On the threshold of memory at the Mémorial du Camp de Rivesaltes'
11.45 – 12.00 Tea and Coffee
12.00 – 13.30 Panel 2 – Generational memory of conflict
Kate Newby (University of Brighton) "Nothing happened to me": The 'speakable' and 'hearable' in personal narratives of youth experience during the Northern Irish conflict, 1969-1998'
Silvia Menendez Alcalde (The Centre for Justice and Peacebuilding) 'The sociocultural impact of the Spanish 1977 Amnesty Law: A Generational Perspective'
Lisa van Dijck (Independent Researcher) Generational memory and the Second World War
13.30 – 14.15 Lunch
14.15 – 15.15 Panel 3 – Exclusion and the 'Politics of Forgetting'
Peter Morgan (University of Brighton) 'The British discourse on the mass killing of civilians during the Armenian genocide of WW1'
Alice Tofts (University of Nottingham) 'To silence or prompt memory: The case of private photographs of victims of Nazi persecution."
15.15 – 15.30 Tea and Coffee
15.30 – 16.30 Keynote Address Rebecca Bryant (University of Utrecht)
16:30 Closing Remarks
Registration:
The event is free, but you must register in order to attend.
Venue:
M2 Boardroom, Grand Parade Building, 68-72 Grand Parade, Brighton BN2 0JY.
The Grand Parade building is located in the centre of Brighton, almost opposite the Royal Pavilion, and about 10 minutes' walk from Brighton station.
Dr Sam Carroll
Research Centre Administrator
Centre for Memory, Narrative and Histories
School of Humanities
10-11 Pavilion Parade
University of Brighton
Brighton
BN2 1RA
United Kingdom
http://twitter.com/CRMNH<redir.aspx?REF=8wt51B0E301DmhE92TqnSnPJHWR1v9LFo46EsjLTapCSLA99kdrVCAFodHRwOi8vdHdpdHRlci5jb20vQ1JNTkg.>
https://www.facebook.com/cmnhBrighton <redir.aspx?REF=nimEaIEs_KEldZUjqagRbBg4ldWxl0TixYJGNzdbJNqSLA99kdrVCAFodHRwczovL3d3dy5mYWNlYm9vay5jb20vY3JtbmhCcmlnaHRvbg..>
http://arts.brighton.ac.uk/research/cmnh <redir.aspx?REF=dzkUPATAhIwi3KaGTQAkkXCmCbYhQNefeqdsJxT0siaSLA99kdrVCAFodHRwOi8vYXJ0cy5icmlnaHRvbi5hYy51ay9yZXNlYXJjaC9jbW5o>
Time, Memory and Conflict: Critical Approaches
Friday 6th July, 9:30am - 5pm, M2, Grand Parade, University of Brighton
An interdisciplinary, one-day conference at the University of Brighton
Research on the complex inter–relations between past, present and future in the time after political violence often leads us to question and push the boundaries of established theories and methods. Increasingly, work in this area reflects a critical awareness of the different modalities of time and memory within and across various post-conflict contexts. That being said, more can be done to further methodological and theoretical links between different approaches to studying time, memory and conflict. This can take the form of research into unexplored contexts, or critical reflections on established frameworks and debates.
Bringing together scholars from an array of different intellectual fields, this conference aims to encourage a set of conversations on how we might approach and understand the multi-directional interplay between experiences and representations of a 'past' that in many ways is not 'over', but which overshadows the present and complicates the imagining of the future. Key questions and areas of exploration are: What are the ethical and political commitments of research in post-conflict contexts? How does this research relate to questions of positionality? How might new research areas or critical reflections on established practical and theoretical approaches further our understanding of time, memory and conflict?
http://arts.brighton.ac.uk/res
Book a place:
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e
Keynote Address: Prof. Rebecca Bryant, University of Utrecht, Netherlands: 'Post-conflict Futures: Temporal Orientations After Catastrophe".
9.30 – 10.00 Registration
10.00 – 10.15 Welcome
10.15 – 11.45 Panel 1 – Representations of conflict pasts
Kasia Tomasiewicz (University of Brighton) 'Changing representation of the Second World War in the Imperial War Museum, London'
Marco Sottilotta (University of Rome) 'Contested Heritage and Regimes of Historicity. Past, Present and Future in the Kingdom of Buganda'
Ian Cantoni (University of Brighton) 'Spaces of liminality: On the threshold of memory at the Mémorial du Camp de Rivesaltes'
11.45 – 12.00 Tea and Coffee
12.00 – 13.30 Panel 2 – Generational memory of conflict
Kate Newby (University of Brighton) "Nothing happened to me": The 'speakable' and 'hearable' in personal narratives of youth experience during the Northern Irish conflict, 1969-1998'
Silvia Menendez Alcalde (The Centre for Justice and Peacebuilding) 'The sociocultural impact of the Spanish 1977 Amnesty Law: A Generational Perspective'
Lisa van Dijck (Independent Researcher) Generational memory and the Second World War
13.30 – 14.15 Lunch
14.15 – 15.15 Panel 3 – Exclusion and the 'Politics of Forgetting'
Peter Morgan (University of Brighton) 'The British discourse on the mass killing of civilians during the Armenian genocide of WW1'
Alice Tofts (University of Nottingham) 'To silence or prompt memory: The case of private photographs of victims of Nazi persecution."
15.15 – 15.30 Tea and Coffee
15.30 – 16.30 Keynote Address Rebecca Bryant (University of Utrecht)
16:30 Closing Remarks
Registration:
The event is free, but you must register in order to attend.
Venue:
M2 Boardroom, Grand Parade Building, 68-72 Grand Parade, Brighton BN2 0JY.
The Grand Parade building is located in the centre of Brighton, almost opposite the Royal Pavilion, and about 10 minutes' walk from Brighton station.
Dr Sam Carroll
Research Centre Administrator
Centre for Memory, Narrative and Histories
School of Humanities
10-11 Pavilion Parade
University of Brighton
Brighton
BN2 1RA
United Kingdom
http://twitter.com/CRMNH<redir
https://www.facebook.com/cmnhB
http://arts.brighton.ac.uk/res
2.
International Conference "Curiosity and Commitment: Cultural/Social Sciences and the Transformation of European Universities"
*Curiosity and Commitment *
*Cultural/Social Sciences and the Transformation of European Universities*
*A celebratory symposium for Helmut Eberhart*
*18 –19 October 2018, Graz, Austria*
*The international symposium addresses political transformations within
universities and their influence on academic everyday spaces, working
strategies and research motives from the 1970s to the present day.
Centrally the focus will be on investigating how the use of scientific
curiosity and responsibility in various European countries has been, and
will be, shaped by changed policies concerning university teaching,
research and funding. On the other hand, the question of how the potential
of a curious, socially responsible research can be used to productively
confront and counteract power-political transformations will be pursued.
Special attention will be paid to the transformation of European
universities into competitive enterprises in the global knowledge society
and to the conceptualization of knowledge production as an economic
activity and political tool. Keynote speeches and lectures will provide an
exploration into the heterogeneous university landscape of Europe with
insights into local as well as superregional challenges in the context of
"Maastricht", "Bologna" and the discussions about the neo-liberalization of
European universities. In the field of tension between "curiosity-driven
research" and "research driven by funding policy", the conference also
explicitly addresses the situation of teaching, and of young scientists in
an international context. *
*The reason for the symposium is the retirement of Prof. Dr. Helmut
Eberhart in autumn 2018. The scientific and university-political aspects of
an academic biography, living between curiosity and mission, prescribe the
temporal, thematic and sociopolitical guidelines of the conference.*
*All lectures will be simultaneously translated into English/German.*
*Program*
*Thursday*, 18.10.2018
13.00 *Greetings and keynote*
Helmut Konrad, Graz, Austria: *One step forward and one back. A dancing
course in university politics*
15.00–17.00 *Lectures*
Güldem Baykal Buyuksarac, Istanbul, Turkey: *On science, research ethics,
and politics: Revisiting applied anthropology in the neoliberal age*
Ulrika Wolf-Knuts, Turku, Finland: *Was everything better in the past?*
Jürgen Barkhoff, Dublin, Ireland: *Impact – dirty word or the salvation of
the Humanities?*
19.00–22.00 *Eulogy, ceremony with buffet*
*Friday,* 19.10.2018
10.00–13.00 *Lectures*
Britta Kalkreuter, Galashiels, UK: *Ideas or solutions? Pondering the
business of academic research*
Johannes Moser, Munich, Germany: *Elusive imaginations. The 'restructuring'
of German universities from the perspective of European ethnology*
Sanja Potkonjak & Nevena Skrbic Alempijevic, Zagreb, Croatia: *Images of
utopia: University policies, academic practices & social changes *
Klaus Schönberger, Klagenfurt, Austria: *Cultural science between
educational demand and absolute university – questions to an applied
cultural science between creative industries and critical cultural analysis*
15.00–20.00 *Excursion to a pilgrimage site and Styrian wine bar*
*Location:*
Universitätszentrum Wall, Simultanübungsraum und Multifunktionsraum,
Merangasse 70, 8010 Graz, Austria
*Organisation: *Katharina Eisch-Angus, Barbara Frischling, Judith Laister,
Burkhard Pöttler, Johann Verhovsek
*Cooperation partners: *
*Institute for Cultural Anthropology and European Ethnology of Graz
University Department of Translation Studies Working Group Social Sciences
and Humanities (WG SSH) of the European university network COIMBRA*
*International
Doctoral Program ‚Transformations in European Societies'*
*https://kulturanthropologie.uni-graz.at/
<https://kulturanthropologie.uni-graz.at/ >*
*Cultural/Social Sciences and the Transformation of European Universities*
*A celebratory symposium for Helmut Eberhart*
*18 –19 October 2018, Graz, Austria*
*The international symposium addresses political transformations within
universities and their influence on academic everyday spaces, working
strategies and research motives from the 1970s to the present day.
Centrally the focus will be on investigating how the use of scientific
curiosity and responsibility in various European countries has been, and
will be, shaped by changed policies concerning university teaching,
research and funding. On the other hand, the question of how the potential
of a curious, socially responsible research can be used to productively
confront and counteract power-political transformations will be pursued.
Special attention will be paid to the transformation of European
universities into competitive enterprises in the global knowledge society
and to the conceptualization of knowledge production as an economic
activity and political tool. Keynote speeches and lectures will provide an
exploration into the heterogeneous university landscape of Europe with
insights into local as well as superregional challenges in the context of
"Maastricht", "Bologna" and the discussions about the neo-liberalization of
European universities. In the field of tension between "curiosity-driven
research" and "research driven by funding policy", the conference also
explicitly addresses the situation of teaching, and of young scientists in
an international context. *
*The reason for the symposium is the retirement of Prof. Dr. Helmut
Eberhart in autumn 2018. The scientific and university-political aspects of
an academic biography, living between curiosity and mission, prescribe the
temporal, thematic and sociopolitical guidelines of the conference.*
*All lectures will be simultaneously translated into English/German.*
*Program*
*Thursday*, 18.10.2018
13.00 *Greetings and keynote*
Helmut Konrad, Graz, Austria: *One step forward and one back. A dancing
course in university politics*
15.00–17.00 *Lectures*
Güldem Baykal Buyuksarac, Istanbul, Turkey: *On science, research ethics,
and politics: Revisiting applied anthropology in the neoliberal age*
Ulrika Wolf-Knuts, Turku, Finland: *Was everything better in the past?*
Jürgen Barkhoff, Dublin, Ireland: *Impact – dirty word or the salvation of
the Humanities?*
19.00–22.00 *Eulogy, ceremony with buffet*
*Friday,* 19.10.2018
10.00–13.00 *Lectures*
Britta Kalkreuter, Galashiels, UK: *Ideas or solutions? Pondering the
business of academic research*
Johannes Moser, Munich, Germany: *Elusive imaginations. The 'restructuring'
of German universities from the perspective of European ethnology*
Sanja Potkonjak & Nevena Skrbic Alempijevic, Zagreb, Croatia: *Images of
utopia: University policies, academic practices & social changes *
Klaus Schönberger, Klagenfurt, Austria: *Cultural science between
educational demand and absolute university – questions to an applied
cultural science between creative industries and critical cultural analysis*
15.00–20.00 *Excursion to a pilgrimage site and Styrian wine bar*
*Location:*
Universitätszentrum Wall, Simultanübungsraum und Multifunktionsraum,
Merangasse 70, 8010 Graz, Austria
*Organisation: *Katharina Eisch-Angus, Barbara Frischling, Judith Laister,
Burkhard Pöttler, Johann Verhovsek
*Cooperation partners: *
*Institute for Cultural Anthropology and European Ethnology of Graz
University Department of Translation Studies Working Group Social Sciences
and Humanities (WG SSH) of the European university network COIMBRA*
*International
Doctoral Program ‚Transformations in European Societies'*
*https://kulturanthropologie.u
<https://kulturanthropologie.u
Consultez-les ou voyez toute la liste en visitant notre site web:
http://cas-sca.ca/fr/appel-de-
http://cas-sca.ca/call-for-pap
Thank you/Merci