italian-studies: Scholarly discussions in any field of Italian studies
DIS/LOCATION
University of Pennsylvania, French and Italian Graduate Society Conference
March 18th, 2016
Keynote Speaker: Prof. Lorenzo Fabbri (University of Minnesota)
As recent political and societal occurrences- such as the Syrian war- have
demonstrated, the issue of dislocation has never been more pertinent. From the
physical and geographical displacement of migrants, to the psychological
scarring suffered by individuals, “dislocation” can be understood as the
upheaval of a state of being, of a specific world order, of the mind or even
the body. And at a time of “chronic cultural dislocations” (Susan Sontag), the
need for a diachronic reflection on the matter has become of increasing
importance. This conference aims to engage and explore the literary exempla of
dislocation on a variety of platforms. Dismembered and grotesque bodies,
alienated souls, exiled individuals, disarticulated
texts all inarguably represent a form of disruption but do they all pertain to
the same aesthetic? How is rupture portrayed, represented or indicated in, or
by, literary or visual texts? Conversely, what can literature and cinema
contribute to the discourse on socio-cultural dislocation? Can the material
text itself become “dislocated” by virtue of translation or rewriting?
Presentations may be given in English (preferable), French or Italian and
should not exceed 15 minutes. Please send a 250-word abstract with your name
and academic affiliation to [log in to unmask] by Friday, January
20th, 2017.
Approaches to dis/location may include, but are certainly not limited to, the
following themes:
- Order/Disorder - The Grotesque - Affect Theory - Monstrosity - Trauma -
Medical writings - Alienation - Science and Literature - Mysticism -
Psychoanalysis - Disembodiment - Translation - (Auto) Thanatography - Re-
writing - Migration/Exile - Film adaptation - Fantastic Wanderings - Second
language writing - De-familiarization - Materiality of texts - Textual or
biological articulation - Plasticity - Dismemberment - Gender and transhumanism
- Fragmentation - Climax and anti-climaxes
N.B.-Please note, that while papers may be given in any of the three
languages, all subsequent questions and conversations will be posed and
conducted in English.
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