Borders. Flying University of Transnational Humanities

Borders. Flying University of Transnational Humanities

Veranstalter
Research Institute of Comparative History and Culture, Hanyang University
Veranstaltungsort
International Conference Room, Paiknam Library and Academic Information Center
Ort
Seoul
Land
Korea, Rep. of
Vom - Bis
25.06.2011 - 29.06.2011
Deadline
14.04.2011
Von
Dittrich, Klaus

Flying University of Transnational Humanities (FUTH) is an annual summer school and year-round online forum for researchers and graduate students interested in the transnational paradigm of humanistic inquiry.

FUTH takes its name and immediate inspiration from Poland’s Flying University, an underground institution which offered an alternative education outside the remit of state control and government censorship. FUTH is particularly concerned with developing critical understandings that are resistant to the ideological and ideational hegemony of the nation-state and the epistemological and hermeneutic conventions that support it. This does not mean that FUTH seeks to dispense with the ‘national’ and construct a reified ‘transnational’ to replace it or to foster ‘transnationalism’ as an ideological alternative to ‘nationalism’. FUTH aims to free our imaginations from the regime of the nation-state and to offer new ways of thinking about the political, social and cultural order of the world, both past and present.

The Flying University of Transnational Humanities is accordingly,

- trans-cultural: FUTH will not only critically examine the production and dissemination of (trans-) national knowledge and culture, but also problematize imagined geographies of the ‘East’ and the ‘West.’ In so doing, we will explore times, places, and subjects as fluid and hybrid, rather than as confined and constrained by geopolitical or cultural boundaries.

- trans-disciplinary: FUTH seeks to comprehend the complex nature of various trans-cultural issues and employ trans-disciplinary approaches. To that end, FUTH is open to scholars, educators, researchers and students from all academic specializations.

- trans-institutional: FUTH is an intellectual network, founded and run by a global consortium of scholars, departments, and institutions. With the support of this network, we hope to facilitate trans-cultural and trans-disciplinary collaborations.

PROGRAM

The Flying University of Transnational Humanities is ‘in session’ once per year for one week, and will normally be held during summer vacation. The host site changes on an annual or bi-annual basis and rotates between partner institutions. FUTH online runs year-round: through its dedicated website, a permanent online space will be provided for interactive discussions. All institutions, departments, and scholars are welcome to participate both offline and online.

Each year, FUTH will have a different cross-disciplinary theme around which the sessions will be organized. Renowned scholars from partner and other institutions will be invited to share their ideas in lectures and discussions. The FUTH steering and advisory committees, in conjunction with faculty members of partner institutions and other specialists, will prepare lecture syllabi and reading lists. Student participants are expected to study the readings in advance of each lecture and seminar discussion. A selected number of participants will also have an opportunity to present their ongoing research. All lectures, seminars and presentations will be held in English, in principle, while the possibility of translingual practices will be explored.

For the initial three years (2010–2012), the overarching theme of FUTH is ‘borders’. There have been numerous studies on how borders are constructed, negotiated, and policed and how they are simultaneously transgressed, challenged, and renegotiated. Borders are no longer seen simply as physical divisions but also as discursive practices and cultural institutions. However, the multiplicity and hybridity of borders (e.g., national, ethnic, cultural, geographical, gender, political, economic, etc.), as well as their transnational scalability (e.g., local, national, supranational, global, etc.), has yet to be intensively investigated.

The 2nd FUTH will take place at the Research Institute of Comparative History and Culture, Hanyang University, Seoul, Korea, June 25-29, 2011. Under the subheading of ‘Border-crossing Self’, we hope to gather diverse research and knowledge on border-related (cross-border or bordering) issues such as migration, ethnicity, language, citizenship and gender and open up a forum for discussions on the (un)making of the trans/national self.

APPLICATION

We are actively seeking grad students and recent PhDs to apply to the 2nd Flying University of Transnational Humanities.

Eligibility: Graduate students as well as recent PhDs are welcome to participate.

To apply: Please fill out and send as attachment via email the application form on our website http://www.rich.ac/eng/fly/apply.php?pageNum=5&subNum=3um=3 to hk.transnational@gmail.com.

Registration fee: There is no registration fee.

Accommodation and travel: Accommodation will be provided for all participants. However, participants are expected to arrange their own funding for travel and daily living expenses. After a review by the FUTH organizing committee of the academic statement and the presentation proposal, partial travel grants may be awarded to a limited number of applicants who are not able to raise the necessary funds.

Presentation: Qualified graduate students and recent PhDs may give a presentation on their ongoing research in a graduate session where lecturers will participate as commentators. Those interested in presenting their research in a graduate session should apply with their curriculum vitae, academic statement and an abstract of their proposed presentation. All applications are subject to review by the FUTH organizing committee.

Deadline: The deadline for applications is April 14, 2011.

Website: http://rich.ac/eng/fly/introduction.php?pageNum=5&subNum=1um=1

Contact: hk.transnational@gmail.com

Programm

DAY 1: JUNE 25 (SATURDAY)

09:00-09:20 Registration

09:20-09:30 Welcome Remarks: Jie-Hyun Lim (Hanyang University)

09:30-11:00 Lecture and Q&A: Naoki Sakai (Cornell University): Translation as Bordering: Translation and the Indeterminacy of National Language

11:00-11:15 Coffee Break

11:15-12:45 Lecture and Q&A: Boris Buden (European Institute for Progressive Cultural Policies): Translation – A Border Crossing or a Border Making Experience

12:45-14:00 Lunch

14:00-15:45 Student Presentation & Feedback

15:45-16:00 Coffee Break

16:00-17:45 Student Presentation & Feedback

DAY 2: JUNE 26 (SUNDAY)

09:30-11:00 Lecture and Q&A: David Newman (Ben Gurion University): Closing, Opening and Re-Closing of Border: A Space-Time Perspective

11:00-11:15 Coffee Break

11:15-12:45 Lecture and Q&A: Ien Ang (University of Western Sydney): Unsettling the National: Heritage and Diaspora

12:45-14:00 Lunch

14:00-15:45 Student Presentation & Feedback

15:45-16:00 Coffee Break

16:00-17:45 Student Presentation & Feedback

17:45-19:00 Dinner

19:00-20:50 Film Screening: The Border City II (2009, Documentary, Director: Hyungsook Hong)

20:50-21:30 Q&A with Director

DAY 3: JUNE 27 (MONDAY)

09:30-11:00 Lecture and Q&A: Rada Iveković (University Jean Monnet - St. Etienne): Those Other Borderlands. Displacing Eurasia

11:00-11:15 Coffee Break

11:15-12:45 Lecture and Q&A: Jie-Hyun Lim (Hanyang University): Border-crossing Intelligentsias in the Cold War Era: South Korean and Polish Dissidents in the Crossfire

12:45-14:00 Lunch

14:00-15:45 Student Presentation & Feedback

15:45-16:00 Coffee Break

16:00-17:45 Student Presentation & Feedback

17:45-19:00 Dinner

19:00-20:30 Film Screening: Whose Is This Song? (2003, Documentary, Director: Adela Peeva). Comments by: Rada Iveković

DAY 4: JUNE 28 (TUESDAY)

09:30-11:00 Lecture and Q&A: Sandro Mezzadra (University of Bologna): Border as a Method: Movements and Struggles of Migration in a Globalizing World

11:00-11:15 Coffee Break

11:15-12:45 Lecture and Q&A: William Walters (Carleton University): ‘The Vehicles Are Missing’. Why should we grant ships, railway tunnels and other material objects in a more central place in studies of the contested politics of migration

12:45-14:00 Lunch

14:00-15:45 Student Presentation & Feedback

15:45-16:00 Coffee Break

16:00-17:45 Student Presentation & Feedback

17:45- Farewell Party

DAY 5: JUNE 29 (WEDNESDAY)

10:00-11:30 Wrap-Up Discussion

11:30 Adjournment

Kontakt

HONG Sunghee

RICH, College of Humanities, Hanyang University, Seoul 133-791, Korea
Telefon +82-2220-0545
Fax +82-2220-0542

http://rich.ac/intro/intro.php
Redaktion
Veröffentlicht am
Beiträger
Klassifikation
Weitere Informationen
Land Veranstaltung
Sprach(en) der Veranstaltung
Englisch
Sprache der Ankündigung