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קול קורא // לכנס: הכנס השנתי לספרות השוואתית - חריגים ומנודים בספרות, מוזיקה והאמנויות החזותיות [לונג ביץ', מקוון 04/21] דדליין=15.2.21

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COMPARATIVE LITERATURE CONFERENCE: OUTCASTS AND OUTLIERS

CFP: 55th Annual Comparative Literature Conference

Outcasts and Outliers in Literature, Music, and Visual Arts

Wednesday and Thursday, April 7-8, 2021

The Comparative World Literature Program at California State University, Long Beach, invites abstracts for presentations at its 55th annual conference in Long Beach, California on the topic of Outcasts and Outliers. In accordance with university policy, this conference will be virtual. It is the hope of the conference committee that this virtuality will enable a more diverse group of academics to participate.

From the canon wars of the 1980s and 1990s to the debates over the place of genre fiction, popular culture, and digital media in the classroom, to the more recent amplification of critical race and ethnic studies and the appreciation of creative production by people from historically marginalized groups, the question of what to include—and what to omit—continues to provoke debate and response. But what do we do with those texts, topics, and people who have been cast out, or those who are such outliers that they were never included? Likewise, how do we challenge the authority of those who wield the power to decide who / what is included?

This conference will focus on examining and interrogating the notions of outcasts and outliers of literature, music, and the visual arts. That may mean attention to little-known texts, genres that are not typically addressed in a Comparative Literature context, characters and communities pushed into the margins, and the notion of marginality itself. We encourage papers centering the perspectives of Black, indigenous and racialized people of color and other marginalized communities.

We invite papers on the following topics:

  • Ambivalent, hybrid, fragmented, or conflicting identities
  • Mixed race and interracial interactions
  • The interstices of ethnicity, gender, and race
  • Intra-racial and inter-racial discrimination
  • The alienated “other” as a trope
  • Vulnerability and precarity in the time of COVID-19
  • Sites of erasure and institutional violence (e.g., deportation centers, police brutality, healthcare policies, lack of emergency response to natural disasters)
  • Questions of trans and genderqueer identity
  • Settler-colonial legacies of injustice
  • Afrofuturism, speculative fiction, and inclusive futures
  • The concept of misfits and misfitting
  • Intersections with disability justice, crip time, and embodied difference
  • Kinship, community, and the politics of care in the margins
  • The exilic intellectual (e.g., Said)

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