DearWhoever,
 
Still not sure what exactly these e-mails I keep getting are about but the research areas described are certainly fascinating. I am only a Bachelor student in Psychology so a lot of the descriptions are difficult for me to understand but I want to wish all the resarchers the best of luck. And to those who ask to be removed from the list I would suggest you attempt to broaden your horizons. You could always store all the e-mails in a folder and read them later on when you have the time. That's what I'm doing.
 
Cheers :)
 
By the way, I like to write and am attempting to distribute some writing through the medium of Facebook. I believe that this medium is undervalued by acedemics and has much merit. I find it to be an excellent means of circulating work. That is - for those who do not care about making money. If acedemic papers were published on social network sites referencing would be a whole lot easier, and sources much easier to locate. 

Date: Thu, 25 Nov 2010 12:02:40 +0100
From: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Call for Papers: VIII Annual Social Theory Forum
To: [log in to unmask]


Dear Orion,

could I be removed from the newsletter? This is not really my field, I registered I think more than one year ago.
Many thanks, and good work
Rachele

2010/11/23 Orion Anderson <[log in to unmask]>
Dear Colleague,
We wish to draw your attention to a dynamic conference coming up at the University of Massachusetts, Boston in April 2011.
The Social Theory Forum is an annual international conference that creatively explores, develops, promotes and publishes cross-disciplinary social theory in an applied and critical framework.
DETAILS—AND THE COMPLETE CALL FOR PAPERS—APPEAR BELOW.
Please send a one-page abstract or proposal as an email attachment (MS Word Format) to Conference Organizers—Professors Jorge Capetillo and Glenn Jacobs—at [log in to unmask].
The deadline is January 15, 2010. However, we know that scholars often send proposals a few days before the deadline. We would be grateful, therefore, if you can send your proposal by December 22, 2010 (one month from now, three days before Christmas). This will facilitate planning of the conference—as well as of the publication that will be based on the papers.
This is a wonderful opportunity to visit Boston—and to participate in an exciting meeting exploring contemporary social theory.
With regards, 
Hugh Galford, Marketing Director
Library of Social Science
718-393-1104

P. S. LIBRARY OF SOCIAL SCIENCE creates and organizes book exhibits for scholarly conferences. Please see: http://www.libraryofsocialscience.com/organizers.html. We also promote and distribute calls-for-papers for meetings we consider significant. For details, see http://www.libraryofsocialscience.com/cfps.html and/or call 718-393-1104.

Call for Papers

The VIII Annual SOCIAL THEORY FORUM
University of Massachusetts Boston
  April 13 and 14, 2011

Italian Social Theory: from
Antonio
Gramsci to Giorgio Agamben


Organizing Committee

Jorge Capetillo, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Massachusetts Boston
Spencer M. DiScala, Ph.D.  Professor of History, University of Massachusetts Boston
Glenn Jacobs, Ph.D.  Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Massachusetts Boston
Charles Lemert, Ph.D.  John E Andrus Professor of Sociology, Wesleyan University
Siamak Movahedi, Ph.D.  Professor of Sociology, University of Massachusetts Boston
Alessandro Orsini, Ph.D. Professor of Political Sociology, University of Rome "Tor Vergata".
Kalpana Seshadri, Ph.D. Associate Professor of English, Boston College

The Social Theory Forum cordially invites the submission of papers and proposals for its 8th annual meeting, to be held April 13-14, 2011 at the University of Massachusetts Boston. The theme of the conference is: Italian Social Theory from Antonio Gramsci to Giorgio Agamben. We invite proposals addressing the span of modern Italian social theory, including but not limited to thinkers such as Galvano Della Volpe, Norberto Bobbio, Paolo Virno, Giovanni Arrighi, Antonio Negri, and Umberto Eco.

Relevant themes may include: hegemony, culture wars, neo-Gramscianism and international relations, globalization, shifts in global capitalism; biopolitics, homo sacer, immigration, ethnicity and the war on terror, resistance, state sovereignty and power, nationalism, propaganda and agitation, Negri’s theory of “exodus”; technology experience, social media, digital labor, and Agamben’s “bare life.”
Conference organizers also welcome topics bearing on the relevance of Italian Social Thought for the understanding of cultural studies, semiotics, textual analysis, linguistics, structuralism, psychoanalysis, and literary criticism in contemporary scholarship and scientific research.
The conference will feature both invited and submitted papers and presentations, as well as audiovisual materials. Please send a one-page abstract or proposals as email attachment (MS Word Format) to Conference Organizers—Professors Jorge Capetillo and Glenn Jacobs—at [log in to unmask].
Upon selection and notification of approval by the organizing committee, submitters must send completed presentation paper manuscripts (12-15 pages, preferably in ASA format) by March 15, 2011.
We are in the process of securing a publishing venue for selected papers. Papers will be anonymously peer-reviewed for possible publication. Details will be announced prior to the conference.
About the Social Theory Forum
Department of Sociology
University of Massachusetts Boston

Histories of sociology describe how the discipline formed through nineteenth century struggles to understand the combined upheavals of socio-political revolutions and global expansion of the industrial revolution. These events radically altered established orders and posed questions that remain with us today: class, race, gender, and processes of social change, among others. The twentieth century brought even more tumultuous change, bringing with it great implications for social theory.
The Social Theory Forum (STF) is an annual international conference organized jointly by the sociology and other departments, interested faculty and students at University of Massachusetts Boston, in order to creatively explore, develop, promote, and publish cross-disciplinary social theory in an applied and critical framework. STF offers faculty and students of UMass Boston and other national and international colleges and universities an interactive medium to discuss various aspects of the way in which particular theoretical traditions can be relevant to present everyday issues, as well as to the current state and the future of social theory.
STF’s goals are:
  • To critically engage with and evaluate classical and contemporary social theories in a cross-disciplinary and comparative cross-cultural framework in order to develop new integrative theoretical structures and practices;
  • To foster individual and collective self-reflexivity in exploring social theories in global and world-historical contexts to aid people effectively address social problems;
  • To foster an interactive and dialogical learning experience and research in theory within and across faculty, students, and community divides on and off campus; and
  • To foster exchange of ideas open to constructive and integrative exploration of diverse and conflicting viewpoints, modes of thinking, and world-views.

_______________________________________

Correspondence address
Attn.: Social Theory Forum
Department of Sociology
University of Massachusetts Boston
100 Morrissey Boulevard
Boston, MA 02125

www.umb.edu

 

 




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______________________________________

Rachele Malavasi
Faculty of Sciences and Technologies
Carlo Bo Urbino University
61029 Urbino - Italy
Cell. +39 349 8551997
http://uniurb.academia.edu/RacheleMalavasi
______________________________________
"I wonder what will happen when the very things that taught us how to think will disappear." Paul Sheppard

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