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FORCED-MIGRATION  February 2011

FORCED-MIGRATION February 2011

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Subject:

Call for Papers: Life Writing and Human Rights conference, July 2011

From:

Forced Migration List <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Forced Migration List <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Wed, 9 Feb 2011 13:49:37 +0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

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text/plain (116 lines)

Kingston University London Centre for Life Narratives - Life Writing and 
Human Rights conference July 2011 Final Call for Papers

Centre for Life Narratives, Kingston University, London (CLN) AND 
University of Minnesota, Departments of Creative Writing and Human Rights
11, 12, 13 July 2011 AT KINGSTON UNIVERSITY, LONDON
Call for Papers, Workshops, Performances: Genres of Testimony - Life 
Writing and Human Rights

Keynote speaker: PROFESSOR GEORGE STEINER of Churchill College, Cambridge

OTHER CONFIRMED SPEAKERS INCLUDE:

  * Patricia Hampl
* Eva Hoffman
* Mark Muller QC
* Sidonie Smith
* Julia Watson

And an exclusive screening of the Oscar nominated documentary film 
"Enemies of the People: One man's journey to heart of the killing 
fields" followed by a Q&A with the director, Rob Lemkin

Please send all replies to: [log in to unmask]

-------
The stories we tell about our lives and the lives of those around us 
leave footprints across history. That history can be of personal, 
familial or of widespread political and public importance. Whether 
public or private, the telling of and the listening to life narratives 
is a concern of increasing importance across a range of disciplines, 
professions and practices.

Since the end of the First World War, politics has been increasingly 
expressed as and measured against norms categorised as human rights. The 
individual in relation to the state and states in their interactions 
with one another are, in theory and sometimes also in practice, governed 
by the legal architecture of human rights frameworks at national, 
regional and global levels. These same processes may come into play in 
cases of domestic or private human rights abuses, where the victim must 
make public their suffering in order for it to be recognised, and for 
justice to be done.

The bulk of human rights defence and advocacy is based on making acts 
open to legal process. For this to happen we need victims to testify. We 
need witnesses to write their autobiographies and memoirs and we need 
the media to investigate and report on atrocities. We need perpetrators 
to confess. We need the life stories of all those involved.

What is the relationship between these two concerns: Human Rights and 
Life Narratives?

The Conference Organisers, Annette Kobak, Patricia Hampl, Eva Hoffman, 
Meg Jensen, Philip Spencer and Brian Brivati, developed this event in 
collaboration with writers, academics, human rights activists, 
historians and filmmakers including Ben Barkow, David Charters, 
Catherine Cissé, Rachel Cusk, Jim Dawes, Barbara Frey, Vesna 
Goldsworthy, Margaretta Jolly, Rob Lemkin, Max Saunders, and George 
Szirtes, many of whom will be participating in the conference itself.

We invite the submission of abstracts and suggestions for potential 
papers, workshops, round-table discussions, panels, performances and 
works in progress that will add to our understanding of the processes 
involved in the shaping of genres of testimony, from the collection of 
eyewitness accounts of atrocities to the archiving of propaganda, 
letters and ephemera from scenes of human rights abuse, print and 
broadcast media coverage before during and after an event, as well as 
creative post-conflict reflections voiced in memoirs, poetry, 
psychoanalytic narratives, the dramatic and visual arts.

We are looking for work that will debate, among other things, the 
following questions

* How do the processes involved in the telling and compiling of 
testimony in extreme situations of crimes against humanity affect our 
perception of these events and our ability to prevent them?
* How are such events named and changed in that naming?
* How are they described and what happens to that description in the 
legal, media, political and emotional life of the event over time?

We would particularly welcome papers, panels, workshops, performances or 
readings that:
* Come from and/or explore mainstream or more obscure genres of testimony
* Come from professionals engaged with human rights practice and/or come 
from diverse disciplinary perspectives
* Present coherent interdisciplinary and inter-professional engagements 
and/or combine formal presentations with elements of performance and 
creativity
* Offer conference delegates suggestions for future practical actions in 
the prevention of human rights abuses and in the treatment of perpetrators

ABSTRACTS AND ENQUIRIES
Please provide a 500 word abstract and a brief bio via our webpage by 
1st March
www.kingston.ac.uk/fass/activities/conferences/abstracts

Questions regarding CLN may be sent to Dr Meg Jensen, Director: 
[log in to unmask]

-- 
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Note: The material contained in this communication comes to you from the 
Forced Migration Discussion List which is moderated by Forced Migration 
Online, Refugee Studies Centre (RSC), Oxford Department of International 
Development, University of Oxford. It does not necessarily reflect the 
views of the RSC or the University. If you re-print, copy, archive or 
re-post this message please retain this disclaimer. Quotations or 
extracts should include attribution to the original sources.

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