• Keine Ergebnisse gefunden

Discovery, Nineteenth Century Studies Association (11-13 Mar 21)

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Aktie "Discovery, Nineteenth Century Studies Association (11-13 Mar 21)"

Copied!
2
0
0

Wird geladen.... (Jetzt Volltext ansehen)

Volltext

(1)

1/2

Discovery, Nineteenth Century Studies Association (11-13 Mar 21)

online, Mar 11–13, 2021 Deadline: Oct 31, 2020

Christa DiMarco, The University of the Arts DISCOVERY

The 42nd Annual Virtual Conference Nineteenth Century Studies Association

Website: https://ncsaweb.net/current-conference-2021-cfp/

NCSA welcomes proposals for papers, panels, roundtables, and special sessions that explore our theme of “Discovery” in the long nineteenth century (1789-1914). Scholars are invited to interro- gate the trope of “discovery” by questioning the term’s ideological and colonial implications. Why was the concept of “discovery” so appealing in the nineteenth century, and what does its populari- ty tell us about the people and social structures that were so invested in it? Papers might also con- sider indigenous perspectives that challenge ideas of western “discovery” and settler colonialism, new voices that theorize and critique nineteenth-century “discoveries,” intellectual exchange between cultures, and other methods of unmasking narratives of exploration and “discovery.”

As an interdisciplinary organization, we particularly seek papers by scholars working in art/archi- tecture/visual studies, cultural studies, economics, gender and sexuality, history (including history of the book), language and literature, law and politics, musicology, philosophy, and science (and the history of science). In light of the many changes in pedagogy, research, and the exchange of ideas we have all experienced this past year, we particularly welcome papers, panels, or roundtable topics that address discoveries in the use of technology for nineteenth-century studies and teaching.

Papers might discuss recovering forgotten manuscripts, or discovering new ways of thinking about aesthetic and historical periods. Scholars might explore not only the physical recovery of the past (archeology, geology), but also intellectual recovery as old ideas become new (evolution, neoclassicism, socialism, spiritualism). Papers might discuss publicizing discoveries (periodicals, lectures), exhibiting discoveries (museums, world’s fairs, exhibitions), or redressing the legacy of nineteenth-century practices (decolonization of museum collections and the repatriation of colo- nial-era artifacts). Other topics might include rediscovering and revisiting the period itself: teach- ing the nineteenth century, editing primary texts, and working toward diversity and social justice in the humanities. For more details, visit: https://ncsaweb.net/current-conference-2021-cfp/

Reference:

CFP: Discovery, Nineteenth Century Studies Association (11-13 Mar 21). In: ArtHist.net, Oct 23, 2020

(2)

ArtHist.net

2/2 (accessed Feb 27, 2022), <https://arthist.net/archive/23785>.

Referenzen

ÄHNLICHE DOKUMENTE

The 2012 business climate barometer from the standpoint of foreign investors, released at the end of October and drawn up by the IESE business school and the government- run Invest

• „at least three funding organizations—New Zealand's Health Research Council and their Science for Technological Innovation program, as well as the.. Volkswagen

In his Lives of Italian artists, first / \ published in 1550, 40 years after Botticelli’s death, the painter was attributed a rather ignoble end.' During the power vacuum in

How can we model goal change, how and when does a self-steering organisation change its course?. Here we must first ask: What is a

Dirk Messner, Director of the German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik and Simon Maxwell, Director of the Overseas Development Institute,

Paper or panel proposals are invited on any aspect of the politics of nineteenth century knowledge, including information, education, taste, disciplinarity, and science.

Unconstrained by the imperial frames that characterized the era's own approach to globalization, the Society encourages a rethinking of the period via bien- nial world congresses

The Dahesh Museum of Art invites graduate students to submit 20-minute papers for its second annual graduate symposium on recent developments in the history of nineteenth-century