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Tuesday, May 23, 2017

International Conference on REVOLUTION, REFORMATION AND RE-FORMATION: Perspectives on Conflict and Change in History





Call For Abstracts: 







Hosted by the Institute of Historical Research, University of London
Deadline for registration: 31st May 2017







Both Martin Luther’s Ninety-five Theses and the October Revolution provoked political, religious, and cultural upheavals at home that reverberated temporally and spatially, evolving into global forces. sixteenth-century Europe and twentieth-century Russia provide insertion points that will allow us to explore the broader themes of revolution and re-formation throughout history. Today, as extremism and radical movements from across the political spectrum receive increasing attention, reflections on the significance of moments of accelerated change in both the short and the long term become greatly relevant and pressing. We are inviting papers considering moments and mechanisms of change in multiple contexts - political, economic, religious, cultural, spatial and material. The conference will take place at the Institute of Historical Research on Thursday 8th June 2017.







The plenary speaker will be Professor Stephen Smith, University of Oxford. Professor Smith's research interests are in the history of modern Russia and China and comparative communism, with a current focus on the 'politics of the supernatural' - how ordinary people deployed religious and magical beliefs and practices as a way of dealing with and putting meaning on the turbulent and often traumatic changes that overtook their lives. In January 2017 he published his latest book, Russia in Revolution: An Empire in Crisis, 1890 to 1928 with Oxford University Press.








The keynote will be delivered by Dr. Daphne Halikiopoulou, Associate Professor of Comparative Politics at Reading. Dr. Halikiopoulou's research looks at radical nationalism, the politics of exclusion, and the cultural and economic determinants of far-right support. She has written books on patterns of secularisation in Greece and the Republic of Ireland, and most recently co-authored The Golden Dawn's 'Nationalist Solution': Explaining the Rise of the Far Right in Greece (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).







Regiester here









Contact Info: 
For more informaton please contact the History Lab committee at ihrhistorylab@gmail.com or message us on twitter @IHRHistoryLAB. Queries can be addressed to Grace Redhead our Conference Convenor, or David Tiedemann our Publicity Officer. 
Contact Email: ihrhistorylab@gmail.com


Workshop on New Directions in the Study of Populism: Arizona State University United States



Call For Abstracts:-







We invite proposals for a paper to be presented at a workshop on “New Directions in the Study of Populism.” The conference will take place March 15 thru March 17, 2018, at the West and Thunderbird campuses of Arizona State University (from Thursday early evening to Saturday early afternoon).







There is now a renewed academic interest in the study of populism, and a surge of empirical explorations and normative evaluations of populism. The purpose of this conference is to explore the "scope and methods" of populism studies as an interdisciplinary area of studies, and identify shared assumptions as well as normative, theoretical, methodological, and political areas or agreement and disagreement.  








We plan to assemble a small group of 20 scholars who are doing cutting-edge work on populism.  We are interested in putting together a mix of more experienced scholars and young scholars, and would like to bring people from different disciplines, different theoretical orientations, and who apply different methodological toolkits.








We have two keynote addresses as part of the conference. On Thursday night, Thomas Frank will give an opening lecture to a broader audience than the conference participants. On Friday night, Theda Skocpol will give a keynote presentation to a smaller group of mainly the conference attendees. Other confirmed participants include Paris Aslanidis (Yale), Jack Bratich (Rutgers), Benjamin McKean (OSU), David Meyer (UC Irvine), and Benjamin Moffitt (Stockholm University).








Participants are expected to contribute a chapter, based on their workshop presentation, to an edited volume. By accepting this invitation you are agreeing to submit a chapter.  We intend that the edited volume would serve as the entry point for scholars and graduate students who are interested in doing research on populism.








Hotel Information:
Hotel rooms are available at a conference rate of $85 (+tax) in the Thunderbird Executive Inn, which is located at the Conference site. There is no registration fee and we will provide meals for registered participants during the conference. It is worth mentioning that Arizona weather is usually particularly nice around March and participants may choose to extend their stay to enjoy the sun (or attend the baseball spring training).







Submission Instructions:
If you are interested in participating in the conference (and are willing to contribute a chapter), please submit a detailed proposal describing the paper you intend to write and present at the conference, situating it in the context of your broader work, and a CV, to one of the organizers (see contact information below). The deadline for submitting a proposal is: July 1, 2017. Acceptance notification expected by August 1st.








Contact Info: 
For questions, contact a member of the organizing committee:
Carol Mueller: carol.mueller@asu.edu
Majia Nadesan: majia@asu.edu
Amit Ron: amit.ron@asu.edu











Monday, May 22, 2017

International Conference :Victim Narratives in Transnational Contexts, January 25- 27, 2018, Austria



Call For Abstracts:








The figure of the victim seems to be virtually unparalleled in its power to polarise contemporary societies. The discursively produced and judicially fixed victim status is highly desirable for individuals and groups because it accords moral superiority and guarantees legal rights and claims. Victims are considered to be essentially ‘good’; they stand on the right side of history and must receive special treatment. This desire for a victim status both at the collective and at the individual level has been cri­ti­cised by, among others, Esther Benbassa, Jean-Michel Chaumont, Peter Novick, and, most recently, Daniele Giglioli. They argue that the current ‘victim cult’ defends victims against any form of criticism and makes them virtually unassailable: Victims are perceived as objects and relieved of any commitment to individual responsibility. They are forever reduced to events in the past, which rules out any perspec­tive on viable future and renders it prac­ti­cally unnecessary. Lastly, and importantly, victims, in particular victims of war and violence in the 20th and 21st centuries, are always associated with the perpetrators and rarely seen as autonomous subjects.










The figure of the victim both constructs and destabilises national and regional historical narratives. These complex processes inspire international as well as transnational competition among victims and induce a revision of national cultures of memory. The reorganisation of Europe after 1989, the increasing globa­li­sa­tion of the world, and the emergence of new media technologies that facilitate the rapid gene­ration of images of victims and perpetrators alike, call for a transnational perspective on victim narra­tives.









The objective of this conference is to identify and analyse conceptualisations of ‘victimhood,’ in par­ti­cular with regard to cultural studies and memory research. It also aims at a critical discussion of vic­tim­hood/victim status in fictional texts (prose, poetry, theatre) as well as in other media (film, photography, etc.). The con­ference invites participants to discuss recent texts (post-1989) that challenge entrenched victim narratives and attempt to transcend the logic of retaliation and atonement without negating or relativising the victims’ suffering. The conference welcomes submissions from a broad range of discip­lines such as film, literary, and cultural studies, and is particularly interested in transnational and trans­cultural aspects.









Possible topics include, but are not limited to:
  • New conceptualisations of victim narratives: What could replace victim narratives?
  • Victim narratives in national memory discourses and their transformation through transnational and transcultural perspectives
  • A critique of self-victimisation and the subversive potential of self-victimisation
  • Competition but also solidarity among victim groups and ensuing consequences
  • Victim narratives and generational narratives
  • Victim narratives and gender
  • Victim narratives in postcolonial contexts
  • Victim narratives in the context of mémoires croisées, entangled history, etc.
  • The commercialisation of memory culture










The conference languages will be German and English. Please send abstracts in English or German (300–500 words) to Christof.Diem@uibk.ac.at along with a short biographical note and a list of publications by May 30th, 2017. Presenters will be notified whether or not their abstracts have been accepted by June 30th, 2017. Where possible, we will provide funding for travel and accommodation.









Organisation: Research Centre Cultures in Contact [Kulturen in Kontakt], Faculty of Humanities 2 (Language and Literature), University of Innsbruck [http://www.uibk.ac.at/kik/] 
Contact Email: Christof.Diem@uibk.ac.at













International Conference :Heritage, Decolonization and the Field. January 26- 27, 2018 United Kingdom

Call For Abstracts: 













The development of heritage as a distinctive, international field of governance regulated through institutions like UNESCO, ICOMOS, ICCROM and the IUCN is closely linked to practices of decolonisation and fieldwork. Taking cultural heritage alone, anthropologists, archaeologists, architects and engineers worked across the decolonising world in countries like Egypt, Indonesia and Pakistan making the development of this new form of governance a reality; so too did experts from area studies, government survey agencies and philanthropic organisations. This work helped to (re-)constitute the fields that these practitioners were connected to, creating new disciplinary assemblages, new forms of knowledge, and rearranging the relationship of fieldworkers to the places where they laboured. At the same time, this process was not simply a product of decolonisation; in fact, it had its origins in knowledge practices which were often closely connected to practices of colonial governance and the complex administrative relationship between colonies and metropoles. These older, colonial practices were simultaneously reconstituted and entangled within these newly emergent disciplinary assemblages and knowledge practices as decolonisation gathered pace.










Yet despite increased interest in the histories and practice of cultural and natural heritage, there is little understanding of how their interconnection with decolonisation and the field actually took place. How did these three things work together to make heritage governance a reality? How did decolonisation shape the form of that governance and the sorts of fieldwork that took place? How, vice versa, did these forms of fieldwork and governance shape decolonisation, and how also did colonial practices play a role? Moreover, how (if at all) do the answers to such questions vary across time and space? If we are to understand the relationship between heritage, decolonisation and the field—and, by extension, the development of heritage governance itself—providing answers to these questions is a necessity, as is considering the methodologies which we might use to make these answers effective.









This conference invites papers which address these questions from a range of disciplinary perspectives, and which in particular use international, comparative, or global case studies to do so. We are interested in papers that take the field of ‘heritage’ as one which is intentionally broad and contingent, encompassing both ‘natural’ and ‘cultural’ heritage and the diverse range of institutions by which it is governed (museums, herbaria, zoos, regional, national and international historic preservation agencies etc). The organisers (William Carruthers, Andreas Gestrich and Indra Sengupta, German Historical Institute London; Rodney Harrison, AHRC Heritage Priority Area Leadership Fellow, UCL Institute of Archaeology) welcome abstracts of no more than 400 words, which should be submitted to carruthers@ghil.ac.uk by 31st May 2017. 






Financial support will be prioritised for those participants without their own travel funds and early career researchers.
Contact Email: carruthers@ghil.ac.uk









Sunday, May 21, 2017



Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund Scholarships for Doctoral Studies 2017 






Applications are invited from eligible candidates for Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund Scholarships for Doctoral Studies 2017. JNMF Scholarships are meant for the candidates aspiring to do PhD in various study streams in India. The scholarships are available to the following categories of persons:

(i) Indian Nationals

(ii) Nationals of other Asian Countries








Duration of Scholarship: Upto 2 years

Value of Scholarship

a) Maintenance allowance including Tuition fee - Rs.18000/- per month


b) Annual contingent expenses for study tours within India, purchase of books, stationery, etc. - Rs.15000/- per annum






Areas of Specialization/Subject


A candidate may apply for scholarship in any one of the following areas of specialisation: 


(1) Indian History and Civilization 

(2) Sociology 

(3) Comparative Studies in Religion & Culture 

(4) Economics 

(5) Geography

(6) Philosophy 

(7) Ecology & Environment








Eligibility Conditions


At the time of making the application for scholarship, a candidate should hold a first class postgraduate degree with a minimum 60% marks in aggregate in both graduate and post graduate level,, already be registered/admitted for Ph.D degree with a recognized University/Institution in India






Those who have applied for registration and have not yet been registered at the time of submission of application, are not eligible to apply; not be above 35 years of age at the time of applying; be a full-time PhD Scholar 







The application form for scholarships for doctoral studies is available at URL www.jnmf.in/sform.html









The downloaded application form should be supported with a DD/Postal Order of Rs.100/- drawn in favour of "Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund" payable at New Delhi.








How to apply

Completed application form together with all the necessary enclosures should reach Administrative Secretary, Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund, Teen Murti House, New Delhi-110011. 









Important Dates

The Last Date for Submission of Application Form is 31st May 2017









Jawaharlal Nehru Memorial Fund

Teen Murti House, New Delhi-110011, Tel: +91-11-23013641, Email: jnmf@bol.net.in





For more information @ www.jnmf.in