2020

“C’era una volta Calibano”, Università Sapienza di Roma, 21 gennaio 2020

ll giorno 21 gennaio, nell’Aula 103 di Marco Polo, Università Sapienza di Roma, Circonvallazione Tiburtina 4, dalle ore 15 in poi, si terrà un seminario-pomeriggio di studi, organizzato dal Dottorato di Ricerca in Studi di Letterature, Lingua e Traduzione Inglesi e intitolato: “C’era una volta Calibano” La rivista Calibano, nata nella seconda metà degli anni 70 per iniziativa di un folto gruppo di allora giovani studiosi (Carole Beebe Tarantelli, Benedetta Bini, Beniamino Placido, Guido Carboni, Paola Colaiacomo, Mario Corona, Nadia Fusini, Barbara Lanati, Franco Moretti, Alessandro Portelli), ridisegnò in maniera radicale gli studi anglistici e americanistici nel nostro paese. Certo, non fu l’unica iniziativa importante in tal senso, ma fu senza dubbio una delle più significative, anche alla luce di quelle che, scioltasi la rivista, sarebbero poi state le carriere da “solisti” dei suoi redattori. Lo scopo dell’incontro non è puramente rievocativo, anche se certo ci si propone di discutere delle circostanze e delle ragioni che resero possibile quell’innovativa impresa intellettuale. Il seminario non vuole però solo riflettere su un passato importante, ma soprattutto su come quel passato può dialogare e interrogare la nostra situazione presente di “lavoratori culturali”, al di là degli specifici steccati disciplinari. In particolare, sarà utile interrogarsi su cosa sono oggi le riviste di critica letteraria nel nostro paese, nell’era dell’ANVUR e della scomparsa (?) di pubblicazioni “militanti”. Cosa è cambiato in questi 40 anni? Come si è andato riconfigurando il panorama delle riviste studi culturali e letterari? All’incontro – apertissimo a tutti – hanno assicurato la loro partecipazione la quasi totalità dei già redattori di Calibano. Giorgio Mariani Coordinatore Dottorato di Ricerca in Studi di Letterature, Lingua e Traduzione Inglesi. Università Sapienza di Roma

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Cfp: “Semiosis of coloniality and cultural dynamics at times of global mobility”, Echo. Rivista interdisciplinare di comunicazione. Linguaggi, culture, società.

“Semiosis of coloniality and cultural dynamics at times of global mobility” Mobility intended either as departure/escape from the native place for political or economic reasons or as desire to conquer “new worlds” is deeply rooted in the human experience of all individuals and communities. In the last twenty years of the 20th century – while the Western colonisation of many areas outside Europe was excluded from mainstream discourse – scholars, theorists, and creatives opened up a discussion on the encounter/clash of cultures and powers. Since then, the experiences of colonised, diasporic, and racialised subjects have been brought back to the fore by anti-colonial Caribbean scholars. Books such as Contrapunteo cubano del tabaco y el azúcar (1940) by Fernando Ortiz Fernández, Discours sur le colonialisme (1950) by Aimé Césaire, and Peau Noire, Masques Blancs (1952) by Ibrahim Frantz Fanon represented a departure from traditional and established Western canons. Therefore, a novel “discourse” was framed by Francophone, Anglophone, Lusophone, and Hispanophone artists and theorists (whose languages, together with Italian, have dominated the modern world) which developed along two different paths: postcolonial and decolonial thinking. Both had the same goal, to achieve epistemic decolonisation as well as political and cultural emancipation from the Western imperium. Consequently, the postcolonial perspectives (mostly related to British colonialism) adopted by Edward Said (Orientalism, 1978), Gayatry C. Spivak (“Can the Subaltern Speak?”, 1988) and Homi Bhabha (The Location of Culture, 1994) as well as the decolonial perspectives (mostly related to Spanish colonialism) adopted by Aníbal Quijano (Colonialidad y modernidad / Racionalidad, 1991) and Enrique Dussel (1492: El encubrimiento del Otro. Hacia el origen of the “mito de la Modernidad”, 1992) are closely linked with the concepts of belonging, roots, nativism, and authenticity. This gradually led to the culturalist/translation discourse of “contact zone” (M.L. Pratt), centre and margin (bell hooks), hybridisation and creolisation (Édouard Glissant), “provincialising Europe” (Dipesh Chakrabarty), and the theorization of the poetic/politics of mestizaje (Gloria E. Anzaldua), “border communities” (Ngũgĩ wa T hiong’o), and (black) diaspora (Paul Gilroy, Stuart Hall, among others). The forced exodus and/or the status of refugees (due to the “democracy” exported by Western powers in a context of globalism and capitalism) demonstrated that colonisation practices did not stop after World War II. Moreover, it showed that the postcolonial system did not implement real decolonisation processes either in the former colonial countries or in the former imperial countries; in fact, these processes were conceived and implemented in the context of the nation-state model inherited from Europe. This led the decolonialidad/modernidad group to propose a distinction between “colonialism” and “coloniality”. ECHO invites scholars from any discipline and trans-discipline as well as creatives in the fields of music, cinema, literature, visual, and digital arts to submit a proposal. Essays may deal with literature, cultural politics, demographics, economics, cultural geography, social and linguistic phenomena, semiotics, epistemology, religion, environment as well as gender, race, and class in the media and the arts. The aim of this issue is to offer new comparative and transnational perspectives which may challenge the Eurocentric concepts of nation and continent, West and East, thus opening a new debate on the categories of world and planetarity. Suggested topics and research fields: Reworking of the concept/feeling of belonging in literary, linguistic, and visual narratives of creative residents and migrants. The concepts of origin/root and here/elsewhere/now as represented/narrated in relation to race, language, nationality, religion, and gender by forcibly displaced individuals or groups. Postcolonialism and decolonisation: the evolution of perspectives, practices, theories, and poetics in the languages of creativity, social policies, and “geo-body-spellings”. Border-crossing theories and practices in the linguistic, visual, literary, multimedia, and transmedia domains, including studies on fashion/clothing, advertising, video art, street art, photography, etc. Postcolonial representations and/or alternatives to postcolonial discourse on identity, gender, and sexuality, including transnational perspectives (in the fields of music, cinema, TV, and other visual media). Connectivity and technology: impact of traditional media (radio and TV), smartphones, social media, and other ways of connecting to (resident) users, power groups, people “on the move”, and displaced individuals. Economics: work and social security for diasporic communities. Diaspora and power: production and evolution of arts and languages in contexts of liminality, (in)visibility, semi-segregation, and in-betweenness. Beyond the limits of authenticity and nativism: the elaborations of the Afro-Futurist model in different cultures of postcolonial diaspora. Deadlines: Abstract (500 words): 8 March 2020 Notification of acceptance: 30 March 2020 Article submission: 14 June 2020 Publication: 30 November 2020 Length of articles: max 7000 words To submit an article write to: rivista.echo@uniba.it https://ojs.cimedoc.uniba.it/index.php/eco/pages/view/callpapers?acceptCookies=1  

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CfP: CHANGING THE (CULTURAL) CLIMATE WITH ECOCRITICISM AND ECOLINGUISTICS INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP, Ferrara, 21-22 May 2020

CHANGING THE (CULTURAL) CLIMATE WITH ECOCRITICISM AND ECOLINGUISTICS INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP Department of Humanistic Studies, University of Ferrara Thursday 21 to Friday 22 May 2020 The discourse of the environment permeates attitudes towards the present, representations of the past and perceptions of the future. How do languages, literatures and other modes of meaning-making promote ecocritical frameworks that interrogate Western and Eastern anthropocentric assumptions, biases and expectations? How do the environmental humanities test new hermeneutic tools to assess the interdependence between natural and anthropic ecosystems? Our focus is on new narratives of fragile and resilient environments; the im/material wellbeing of the organisms that live in them; the interconnections between diverse forms of life. Topics and areas of research include: Climate change fiction Climate change and visual culture Ecopoetry Ecology and the theatre Ecology and performativity Ecosomatic approaches The formation of ecological identity Opinion formation on environmental issues Public awareness and social media The sustainability of heritage We encourage contributions by scholars of Ecocriticism, Ecolinguistics, Ecofeminism, Green Cultural Studies, Media Studies, Semiotics, Translation Studies, Critical Discourse Analysis and Corpus Linguistics, Heritage Studies, Ecotourism. Please send a 300-word abstract and a 100-word bio-note by the 13th of March 2020 to: paola.spinozzi@unife.it, eleonora.federici@unife.it Acceptance of abstracts will be communicated to speakers by the 25th of March 2020. Scientific Committee Paola Spinozzi Eleonora Federici Richard Chapman Vanessa Leonardi The Workshop will be hosted by the Department of Humanistic Studies, University of Ferrara, in collaboration with the innovative PhD Programme in Environmental Sustainability and Wellbeing, http://www.unife.it/studenti/dottorato/it/corsi/riforma/environmental-sustainability-and-wellbeing?fbclid=IwAR16110_4zq-nJJ1B-14TblOL1YDOEXN_cAXzWsw-55SU0jUhdBMohXnxaE

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Cfp: 9 th ESPRit Conference Periodical Formats in the Market: Economies of Space and Time, Competition and Transfer

CALL FOR PAPERS 9th ESPRit Conference Periodical Formats in the Market: Economies of Space and Time, Competition and Transfer Periodische Formate auf dem Markt: Ökonomien von Raum und Zeit, Konkurrenz und Transfer 16–18 September 2020, Ruhr University Bochum, Germany, organised by the DFG Research Unit 2288 Journal Literature 15 September 2020 Postgraduate Workshop Deadline for 300-word abstracts: 31 January 2020 Il testo dalla cfp è presente al seguente link: ESPRit_Conference_2020_Call (1) (1)

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