CfP: “The Refuge of Objects/Objects of Refuge” Symposium, Dec. 14-18, 2016

CALL FOR PAPERS

The Refuge of Objects/Objects of Refuge

An International Symposium organized by

University of Delware—Center for Material Culture Studies and Universität Mainz—Center for Social and Cultural Studies (SOCUM), Transnational American Studies Institute

December 14-18, 2016

Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz

We invite proposals for papers or workshops to be given at the first collaborative symposium organized by the University of Delaware’s Center for Material Culture Studies (CMCS) and the Center for Social and Cultural Studies (SOCUM) at the Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz, Germany. The symposium will take place December 14-18, 2016 and will be hosted by the Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz, the Center for Social and Cultural Studies, and the Transnational American Studies Institute.

The theme of the symposium is the material culture of “Refuge.” In view of recent political events and natural catastrophes that have displaced millions and created international humanitarian crises, this term has acquired a new sense urgency for students and teachers working in the fields related to material culture studies. Definitions dating back to the great trans-Atlantic migrations of the seventeenth- and eighteenth centuries have characterized “refuge” in mostly spatio-political terms as insular settings of escape or privilege, as colonial enclaves or postnational territories, or as secular or sacred retreats. Rather than rehearse the spatial premise of these terms, however, the aim of this symposium is to reflect historically, methodologically, and theoretically on the material dimensions of “refuge,” that is, on the way in which objects generate or confound refuge, or accompany or encumber refugees, in short, the materiality conditioning both the refuge and refugees.

The invite papers that consider the materiality of refuge across the disciplines, periods, and geographies in all the diversity of material objects involved. In tandem with the conference theme of “The Refuge of Objects/Objects of Refuge,” the conference committee invites papers that showcase material culture scholarship in three different formats: conference papers, roundtable presentations, and hands- on workshops.

Possible topics include (but are not limited to):

  • Fugitive Things
  • Things of Im/Migration
  • Sanctuary Objects, objects of respite
  • Material Witness/Witness Matters
  • Objects in Translation
  • Objects as Transition
  • Safe Things
  • Survivor Objects
  • In/direct objects
  • Object Relations
  • Sentimental Objects
  • Remembered things, forgotten objects
  • Traumatic Objects

A one-page proposal and a brief biography of the author (one that includes full name, professional designation) should be submitted to: scheiding@uni-mainz.de. Proposals will be vetted by an interdisciplinary committee.

Deadline: January 30, 2016

Dowload the CfP here.

“Karl Dietz Memorial Lecture“ & Symposium in Honor of Prof. Herget & Prof. Lubbers

“Karl Dietz Memorial Lecture“ & Symposium in Honor of Prof. Herget & Prof. Lubbers

“Karl Dietz Memorial Lecture“ & Symposium in Honor of Prof. Herget & Prof. Lubbers

 

+++ UPDATE +++

You can now download the speeches given by PD Dr. Gessner and Prof. Achilles in honor of Prof. Herget and
Prof. Lubbers:

Laudatio Professor Herget and Slides
Laudatio Professor Lubbers

Also, Prof. Kelleter kindly sent a video message with greetings (in German) which you can watch here.

 

11/26/2015

10:15am-3:45pm, Philosophicum, Hörsaal P5

The faculty and staff of the Transnational American Studies Institute are pleased to invite to this year’s Karl Dietz Memorial Lecture on Thursday, 26 November 2015. It is a great pleasure to combine this annual event with a symposium in honor of two eminent members of Mainz American Studies, Professor Winfried Herget and Professor Klaus Lubbers, to celebrate their 80th birthday. We have selected Thanksgiving for this special occasion to recognize the important achievements of these American Studies scholars.

Lectures:
Prof. David Hall (Harvard University): “New Life in Old Bones? The State of ‛Puritan Studies’ in America and Britain“ (10:15am-11:45pm)

Prof. Julie Rak (University of Alberta): “Mountaineering and First Nations People: Min Aodla Freeman“ (2:15-3:45pm)

For more information, please see the flyer.

Lecture with Prof. Dr. Erik Redling on 12/10/15: “Ideology of Form and Framing Devices”

Lecture with Prof. Dr. Erik Redling on 12/10/15: “Ideology of Form and Framing Devices”

Lecture with

Professor Dr. Erik Redling

Ideology of Form und Framing Devices in Dialekterzählungen der amerikanischen Literatur des 19. Jahrhunderts”

This lecture is part of the lecture series “Ideology of Form” (co-organized by the Transnational American Studies Institute and the Romanisches Seminar)

December 10, 2015; 6 pm (18 Uhr c.t.)
Philosophicum P204
Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz

Bisherige Studien zu Rahmenerzählungen unterschiedliche Funktionen und Wirkungen des narrative Rahmens (wie etwa die Beglaubigungsfunktion oder die Herbeiführung einer Erzählsituation) und vernachlässigen dabei dessen sozialpolitische Dimension. Dieser Vortrag rückt die linguistisch markierte Beziehung zwischen Binnenteil (Dialekt) und Rahmen (Standardsprache) von amerikanischen Dialekterzählungen in den Vordergrund und illustriert mit Rückgriff auf Fredric Jamesons einflussreiches Konzept einer “Ideologie der Form” die divergierenden sozialpolitischen Ideologien derselben erzählerischen Form. Der Vortrag diskutiert die Kurzprosa der “Southwestern Humorists” (1830er und 40er Jahre) und der “plantation tradition” (1880er Jahre) sowie die “conjure tales” des afroamerikanischen Autors Charles W. Chesnutt.

Download the poster here.

Evening Lecture with Rita Charon, MD, PhD on 12/02/15

Evening Lecture with Rita Charon, MD, PhD on 12/02/15

Evening Lecture with

Rita Charon, MD, PhD

(the founder of Narrative Medicine)

December 2, 2015; 6.30 pm
Hörsaal 19, Anatomie
Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz

 

From the twentieth century to the twenty-first century, the interpretative models and spaces of action in medicine have shifted from observing and influencing biological processes towards the biological and technological shaping of health and disease. Examples are manifold: assisted reproduction, prenatal diagnostics, organ transplantation, longevity and dying – in all of these boundary experiences, the role of medicine has changed fundamentally and has influenced the ways in which we conceptualize and deal with human life.

These developments have also resulted in new approaches to explaining and understanding human life and life narratives in social and cultural studies (life writing). As a result, the field of the humanities with its expertise in narratives and interpretation has increasingly been incorporated in biomedical research and health care. The inter-disciplinary graduate program is dedicated to investigate the complexities of narrativity and narratability between the life sciences and life writing.

Download the flyer

Guest Lecture with Paula A. Treichler on 11/24/2015: “Medicine, Money, and Illness Narratives: Whose Story?”

Guest Lecture with Paula A. Treichler on 11/24/2015: “Medicine, Money, and Illness Narratives: Whose Story?”

Guest Lecture

Paula A. Treichler

“Medicine, Money, and Illness Narratives: Whose Story?”

11/24/2015
4-6pm, SB II, 03-436

Paula A. Treichler is Professor Emerita at the Institute of Communications Research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She is the author and editor of a number of books, including How to Have Theory in an Epidemic: Cultural Chronicles of AIDS, A Feminist Dictionary, and The Visible Woman: Imagining Technologies, Gender, and Science.

Download the flyer

Guest Lecture with Elisabeth Engel on 11/18/2015:  “Risks will be Taken”

Guest Lecture with Elisabeth Engel on 11/18/2015: “Risks will be Taken”

Guest Lecture

Elisabeth Engel

“‘Risks will be Taken:’ Insurance and the Uncertain Beginnings of American Independence, 1770s -1840s”

11/18/2015

4:15-5:45pm, Philosophicum, P103

Elisabeth Engel is postdoctoral research fellow at the German Historical Institute, Washington, DC. In her lecture, she will explore how notions of “risk” were constructed and inscribed into the everyday routines of revolutionary Americans as the British imperial power retreated.