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italian-studies: Scholarly discussions in any field of Italian studies

CALL FOR PAPERS

NeMLA Convention, March 5–8, 2020, Boston

The We in I: Self-Representations and their Communities in Italian
Literature

Organizers: Kate Driscoll and Elisa Russian (University of California,
Berkeley)

Interactions between individuals and groups are present across many
literary texts. As images constructed through words, these social portraits
feature multiple players existing—sometimes in harmony and sometimes in
conflict—among shared contexts and communities. The act of
self-representation specifically, insofar as it stands at the crossroads of
self-fashioning and group identity, has long been a staple in the Italian
literary tradition. From Dante’s philosophical treatises to Petrarch’s
lyric love stories, from Ginzburg’s autobiographical writings to Siti’s
autofictional novels, self-representations have appeared across genres and
throughout the centuries as a gesture toward self-definition, never without
an eye, however, to group settings and social influences. In the critical
tradition, though, little attention has been paid to the broader social
imagery that shapes individual representations. In keeping with current
theoretical discourses on life-writing and group identity (e.g., Butler,
Chapelle Wojciehowski, Eribon, Nelson), this panel seeks to expand the lens
through which we may interpret self-representations by accounting for the
essential social nature of personal identity, and the fundamental role
played by groups in its formation. Adopting an innovative approach that
will consider relationships among individuals to be at the heart of
self-representation—fictional, historical, and/or theoretical—topics to be
explored may include, but are not limited to:

   -

   self-identification at the crossroads of group-identification
   -

   self-fashioning conducted under social conditioning, pressures, and/or
   collaborations
   -

   transhistorical connections among selves and communities
   -

   group formation in a global world
   -

   negotiations between the personal and the political through questions of
   language, experience, memory, heritage, and territory
   -

   questions of self-representation in the context of gender, sexuality,
   feminism, and LGBTQIA communities

Please consider submitting an abstract directly through the NeMLA website (
https://www.cfplist.com/nemla/Home/S/17938) by September 30, 2019.


Kate Driscoll
Ph.D. Candidate, Department of Italian Studies
Designated Emphasis in Renaissance and Early Modern Studies
University of California, Berkeley
6303 Dwinelle Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720
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