Call for Papers: Language and Identity in Central Asia
May 4-5, 2012 at UCLA
The UCLA Program on Central Asia is pleased to announce that it will be holding a conference on language and identity in Central Asia on May 4-5, 2012. The organizers are seeking the participation of graduate students, postdoctoral scholars, and junior faculty to take part in a two-day workshop to present and discuss their work in this area. These participants will be joining a group of four invited established scholars in the field and faculty discussants. Confirmed invited scholars are Professors Azade-Ayse Rorlich of the University of Southern California, Gardner Bovingdon of Indiana University, and Harsha Ram of UC Berkeley. Other invited scholars will be listed on the conference webpage as soon as their participation has been confirmed.
The conference is organized along four axes of interaction between Central Asia and other parts of the world:
--contact with the Islamic Middle East and Ottoman world
--contact with the Russian Empire and its successor states
--internal contact among populations of Central Asia
--contact with China and East Asia
Each axis will begin with a keynote talk by an invited scholar, followed by one or two panels that further explore the area.
The organizers are seeking papers that treat questions of language and identity along any of these axes of interaction, either finished work or reports of early works in progress. It is their hope that the conference will provide an opportunity for scholars to present and refine their current research in an area that often lacks institutional support. The conference will be held in a workshop format; panelists will submit their papers ahead of time, allowing for more coherent and productive discussion during the conference.
Submit abstracts of up to 300 words to naomi.caffee at gmail dot com by February 1, 2012. Complete versions of the accepted papers must be submitted by April 15, 2012. Unfortunately, the organizers cannot provide funding for panel participants’ accommodation or travel, but limited accommodations may be available with graduate students at UCLA.
Updated information on the conference will be posted on the Program on Central Asia website: http://www.international.ucla.edu/asia/centralasia
In addition to the UCLA Program on Central Asia, the conference is being supported by the UCLA Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures and the Postcolonial Literature and Theory Colloquium.
For more info please contact:
Naomi Caffee
naomi.caffee at gmail dot com
Caffee, N. [SEELANGS] Conference on Central Asia at UCLA. SEELANGS listserv (SEELANGS@bama.ua.edu, 14 Dec 2011).
December 22, 2011
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