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2007 ANNUAL SOYUZ SYMPOSIUM

Call for Papers

LOCATING "EURASIA" IN POSTSOCIALIST STUDIES:

THE GEOPOLITICS OF NAMING 

April 27-29, 2007

Princeton University 


The geographical and symbolic fragmentation of the "Soviet bloc" was one of
the main outcomes of the collapse of state socialism in the late 1980s. A
seemingly neutral and natural geographical collage of "Eastern Europe," "the
Balkans," "the Baltics," "the Caucasus," "Eurasia," and "the Central Asia"
has replaced the politically enforced unity of the "Second World."  Yet, as
some scholars of the region have pointed out, the new mapping of
postsocialist space exhibits one persistent tendency: the "westernization"
of eastern Europe is accompanied by a simultaneous "easternization" of its
margins.  

For its 2007 meeting, SOYUZ invites submissions for presentations on the
emergence of "Eurasia" as a geocultural space, distinct from and even
opposing to "Europe." How does the reclaimed notion of "Eurasia" help to
construct and symbolically uphold eastern borders of new Europe?  To what
extent this notion was instrumental in shaping new alliances, practices, and
identities outside European borders?  As at previous SOYUZ meetings,
priority is given to rich ethnographic work while entertaining a broad range
of topical and ideological terrains.

Presentations may be from any discipline (anthropology, sociology, folklore,
political science, history, cultural studies, law, economics, literary
scholarship, etc.).  We are looking for papers that combine solid archival
and/or ethnographic material with theory. We are especially interested in
submissions from scholars examining the role of "Eurasia" in the Far East.
We will be able to make travel subsidies available for several foreign
presenters (from the region). 

The symposium has been held annually since 1992, and is at once an intimate
forum where scholars can exchange ideas and engage in dialogue and also the
site of cutting edge presentations from some of the most exciting thinkers
within the growing field of postsocialist research. 
(http://www.uvm.edu/%7Esoyuz/conferences.html)  

The 2007 SOYUZ Program committee includes:  

Judith B. Farquhar,  
Professor of Anthropology and of Social Sciences (University of Chicago) 

Kristen Ghodsee,  
Assistant Professor of Women's Studies (Bowdoin College); program
coordinator for SOYUZ 

Sergey Glebov,  
Assistant Professor of History (Smith College); co-editor of Ab Imperio. 

Bruce Grant,  
Associate Professor of Anthropology (New York University)  

Mark von Hagen,  
Boris Bakhmeteff Professor of Russian and East European Studies and Chair,
Department of History (Columbia University) 

Krista Hegburg,  
Doctoral Candidate, Anthropology (Columbia University) 

Serguei Alex. Oushakine,  
Assistant Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures (Princeton
University)  

Please send an abstract (no longer than 500 words) and a brief CV to Serguei
Oushakine ([log in to unmask]) by January 15, 2007. 

Applicants will be notified of the program committee's decision in February
2007.