In 2025, we will globally commemorate many significant anniversaries, such as the end of World War II (1945) and the end of the Vietnam War (1975). We will mourn the victims of the Srebrenica genocide in Bosnia (1995) and the massacres in Sudan (2005). Additionally, we will be half a decade removed from the onset of the COVID-19 lockdowns. With the theme Beyond Crises: Resilience and (In)stability, the conference seeks to explore how the memory of these events and other critical turning points has led to new tensions but also generated new possibilities. What patterns of decisive change can we observe? What is the role of memory in these processes, and how have they been commemorated? How have such critical turning points and their actors been collectively remembered and commemorated? And what can memory teach us amid the ongoing polycrisis?
While we have identified several central thematic streams, the conference is open to all fields of interest of the members of the MSA:
- Anniversaries and their societal importance: Examining the politics of memory and commemoration practices both top-down and bottom-up.
- Digital Memories: Investigating the impact of digital technologies on memory formation, preservation, and dissemination.
- Economic Memories: Exploring the impact of collective memory on economic behavior, policy-making, and the socio-economic identities of communities.
- Environment: Examining how environmental changes and ecological memory shape collective and individual identities.
- Gender, Belonging, Embodiment: Examining how memory intersects with issues of gender, identity, and embodied experiences.
- Health, Welfare & Care: Reflecting on the memories associated with health, caregiving, and social welfare systems.
- History, Theory, and Methods of Memory Studies: Critically examining the foundational aspects of memory studies, focusing on the theoretical frameworks, historical contexts, and methodological approaches that shape the field.
- Human Rights & Civil Society: Analyzing memory's role in promoting and defending human rights and civil society initiatives.
- Humanitarianism & Philanthropy: Investigating the interplay between memory, humanitarian efforts, and philanthropic activities.
- Materiality and Nostalgia: Exploring the material aspects of memory and the sentimentality associated with nostalgia.
- Memory Education: Focusing on pedagogical approaches to teaching and transmitting memory.
- Memory Politics and Populism: Looking at the deployment of historical memories by both progressive and reactionary movements.
- Memoryscapes Shared and Divided: Studying the spatial and geographical dimensions of memory, including contested and shared spaces.
- Migration and Displacement: Investigating the memories of migration, displacement, and the diasporic experience.
- Notions of Crises: Exploring and interpreting the meaning of crisis within memory construction.
- Public and Private Memory: Analyzing the interplay between public commemorations and private recollections.
- Resilience, Reconciliation, Mourning: Discussing memory's contribution to processes of healing, reconciliation, and mourning.
- Transformation, Activism, Social Justice: Exploring the role of memory in social movements and transformative justice.
- Violence, Justice, Trauma: Addressing the memories of violence, justice processes, and trauma recovery.
- Voices of Memory: Highlighting underrepresented and marginalized narratives in the collective memory.
Proposals should include:
1. Individual Papers: An abstract of up to 300 words, including the title, research question, methodology, keywords and key findings.
2. Panels: A panel description (up to 300 words), abstracts for each paper (up to 300 words per paper), and keywords. Each panel should consist of 4 presenters and a chair.
3. Roundtables: A summary of the roundtable topic (up to 300 words) and brief descriptions of each participant's contribution.
4. Special Events (Film Screenings, Performances, Exhibitions, Workshops): A detailed description (up to 300 words) of the proposed cultural activity, including its relevance to the conference themes, format, technical requirements, and any special considerations. Please also include a short bio of the creator(s) or performer(s). Please note that we have a limited number of slots for creative outputs and cannot cover conference participation costs, including travel, transportation of exhibits and copyrights. We encourage you to contact the organisers if you have organisational or technical questions about a possible special event.
Submission Guidelines
Please note that in order to participate in the conference, you must be a member of the MSA. You can become a member after your paper has been accepted.
We invite the submission of individual papers, panels, roundtable discussions, book launches, workshops and special events from members committed to attending the conference in person. The MSA especially encourages complete sessions, such as panels, round tables and workshops.
Submit your paper at: https://msaprague2025.dryfta.com/72-call-for-papers
Information and dates regarding submissions:
- All proposals should be submitted via our online submission portal by October 20, 2024.
- Notifications of acceptance will be sent out in December 2024.
- We will provide the supporting documentation for those needing to apply for visas in January 2025. Please follow the information on the conference website
- Please note that participants may appear as presenters only once in a panel but may act as chairs in more than one panel.