Narrow Search
Last searches

Results for *

Displaying results 1 to 4 of 4.

  1. Cultures of U.S.-American Conservatism
    Published: 2019

    Conservatism in the United States can seem perplexing from a European perspective. It is also under-theorized in many branches of the humanities, including literary and cultural studies. The international conference “Cultures of US-American... more

     

    Conservatism in the United States can seem perplexing from a European perspective. It is also under-theorized in many branches of the humanities, including literary and cultural studies. The international conference “Cultures of US-American Conservatism” will address both of these problems by bringing together scholars from the social sciences and the humanities to explore US-American conservatism from a cultural perspective. Our approach is pluralistic. We will keep in mind that the conservative movement was never homogeneous. From its origins in anticommunism, it has grown into a loose coalition that includes evangelicals interested in traditional values, independents who become active on divisive issues such as abortion and affirmative action, libertarians, neoliberals, fiscal conservatives, foreign policy hawks, nativists, and opponents of federalism and taxation. What unites these groups is an anti-establishment and individualistic orientation defined in opposition to the allegedly “liberal” media and university system. The goal of the conference is to interrogate this orientation by placing the multiplicity of conservative politics in relation to conservative lifestyles, beliefs, attitudes, discourses, markers of taste, media outlets, and social and familial roles. ; conservatismconference2017.wordpress.com

     

    Export to reference management software
    Source: BASE Selection for Comparative Literature
    Language: English
    Media type: Conference object
    Format: Online
    DDC Categories: 800; 941; 320; 900; 993; 340
    Subjects: americanstudies; culturalstudies; history; law; literarystudies; politicalscience
    Rights:

    L::CC BY 4.0 ; creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

  2. Surveillance, Society, Culture
    Published: 2016

    This conference aims to study the cultures and society of surveillance. The goal is to bring together literary, cultural and surveillance studies to provide a transdisciplinary framework and generate new approaches to fundamental questions: How has... more

     

    This conference aims to study the cultures and society of surveillance. The goal is to bring together literary, cultural and surveillance studies to provide a transdisciplinary framework and generate new approaches to fundamental questions: How has surveillance changed historically and how have these changes been discussed both in the American and in the transnational context? How have these changes been represented in literary and visual culture? What is the ideological significance of surveillance-related genres like the detective or spy novel? Is there an “ethics” of surveillance and how are ethical questions negotiated in literature and culture? How is “meaning”produced textually and semiotically in a surveillance situation? How can cultural artifacts like novels or films operate as actors in the multiple networks of surveillance? How can the processes of subject formation that constitute the observers as well as the observed be described? How do the arts reflect the challenges to the individual posed by technological development? How does the omnipresence of various gazes affect cultural narratives of the “self”? ; surveillanceconference2016.wordpress.com

     

    Export to reference management software
    Source: BASE Selection for Comparative Literature
    Language: English
    Media type: Conference object
    Format: Online
    DDC Categories: 800; 300; 941; 320; 900; 993; 340
    Subjects: americanstudies; culturalstudies; digitalhumanities; mediastudies; history; law; literarystudies; politicalscience; socialscience
    Rights:

    L::CC BY 4.0 ; creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

  3. Cultures of U.S.-American Conservatism
    Published: 2019

    Conservatism in the United States can seem perplexing from a European perspective. It is also under-theorized in many branches of the humanities, including literary and cultural studies. The international conference “Cultures of US-American... more

     

    Conservatism in the United States can seem perplexing from a European perspective. It is also under-theorized in many branches of the humanities, including literary and cultural studies. The international conference “Cultures of US-American Conservatism” will address both of these problems by bringing together scholars from the social sciences and the humanities to explore US-American conservatism from a cultural perspective. Our approach is pluralistic. We will keep in mind that the conservative movement was never homogeneous. From its origins in anticommunism, it has grown into a loose coalition that includes evangelicals interested in traditional values, independents who become active on divisive issues such as abortion and affirmative action, libertarians, neoliberals, fiscal conservatives, foreign policy hawks, nativists, and opponents of federalism and taxation. What unites these groups is an anti-establishment and individualistic orientation defined in opposition to the allegedly “liberal” media and university system. The goal of the conference is to interrogate this orientation by placing the multiplicity of conservative politics in relation to conservative lifestyles, beliefs, attitudes, discourses, markers of taste, media outlets, and social and familial roles. ; conservatismconference2017.wordpress.com

     

    Export to reference management software
    Source: BASE Selection for Comparative Literature
    Language: English
    Media type: Conference object
    Format: Online
    DDC Categories: 800; 941; 320; 900; 993; 340
    Subjects: americanstudies; culturalstudies; history; law; literarystudies; politicalscience
    Rights:

    L::CC BY 4.0 ; creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

  4. Surveillance, Society, Culture
    Published: 2016

    This conference aims to study the cultures and society of surveillance. The goal is to bring together literary, cultural and surveillance studies to provide a transdisciplinary framework and generate new approaches to fundamental questions: How has... more

     

    This conference aims to study the cultures and society of surveillance. The goal is to bring together literary, cultural and surveillance studies to provide a transdisciplinary framework and generate new approaches to fundamental questions: How has surveillance changed historically and how have these changes been discussed both in the American and in the transnational context? How have these changes been represented in literary and visual culture? What is the ideological significance of surveillance-related genres like the detective or spy novel? Is there an “ethics” of surveillance and how are ethical questions negotiated in literature and culture? How is “meaning”produced textually and semiotically in a surveillance situation? How can cultural artifacts like novels or films operate as actors in the multiple networks of surveillance? How can the processes of subject formation that constitute the observers as well as the observed be described? How do the arts reflect the challenges to the individual posed by technological development? How does the omnipresence of various gazes affect cultural narratives of the “self”? ; surveillanceconference2016.wordpress.com

     

    Export to reference management software
    Source: BASE Selection for Comparative Literature
    Language: English
    Media type: Conference object
    Format: Online
    DDC Categories: 800; 300; 941; 320; 900; 993; 340
    Subjects: americanstudies; culturalstudies; digitalhumanities; mediastudies; history; law; literarystudies; politicalscience; socialscience
    Rights:

    L::CC BY 4.0 ; creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/