Dear colleagues,
We're pleased to announce that registration for the Welcoming Strangers Postgraduate Conference is open and that the programme, as well as further information, is available on the conference website. To register, please visit the conference website:
www.welcomingstrangers.org
We look forward to welcoming you,
The Conference Committee:
Prof. Daniela Berghahn, John Abraham, Richard Bater, Lia Deromedi, Deniz Yardimci and Stephanie Vos
WELCOMING STRANGERS
An international, interdisciplinary postgraduate conference
Friday, 27 April 2012
Humanities and Arts Research Centre, Royal Holloway, University of London
KEYNOTE SPEAKERS:
Professor Robin Cohen (Emeritus Professor and Principal Investigator of the Leverhulme Oxford Diasporas Programme, University of Oxford)
Before the Welcoming: The Origins of Difference, the Beginnings of Convergence
Professor Stephanie Hemelryk Donald (RMIT University, Melbourne and Leverhulme Visiting Professor at the Centre for World Cinema, University of Leeds)
The Dorothy Complex: Children and Migration in World Cinema
For programme details and online registration: http://www.welcomingstrangers.org/
With accelerated inter- and intra-national mobility, the concepts of place and displacement, and their impact on individual and collective identities, have received unprecedented scholarly attention in disciplines as diverse as Geography, Politics, Music, Film and Media Studies, English, Postcolonial Studies and Migration and Diaspora Studies. The growing importance of multi-locality, transnational (and 'post-national') communities, cosmopolitanism and various forms of flexible citizenship call binarisms which posit ‘the stranger’ as ‘the Other’ of the indigenous community, as the ‘guest’ who is welcomed by the hegemonic host society, into question. Contests around notions of ethnic essentialism and cultural purity have given way to a widespread acceptance of diversity and the celebration of hybridity. In music, literature, and film, the contributions of artists with transnationally mobile and/or ethnic minority backgrounds to the aesthetic traditions of western hegemonic cultural productions have resulted in innovative creative synergies of the local and the global and have enjoyed considerable cross-over appeal. On the other hand, many ‘strangers’ have not been welcomed, their voices have been silenced, and their artistic expressions have been marginalized. The exponential growth in informational technologies and the mobility of global capital, which once promised to fulfil McLuhan’s vision of a global village, has been accompanied by many unforeseen challenges. Restricted mobility of labour, asylum legislation, and new security challenges pose a threat to the ideal of global identities and a cosmopolitan society.
For details on how to get to Royal Holloway, University of London, see: http://www.rhul.ac.uk/aboutus/ourcampus/gettinghere.aspx
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