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NeMLA 2014 : Ethnicity and Affect in American Literatures

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When Apr 3, 2014 - Apr 6, 2014
Where Harrisburg, PA
Submission Deadline Sep 30, 2013
Categories    american literature   cultural studies   ethnic literature   critical theory
 

Call For Papers

45th Annual Convention, Northeast Modern Language Association (NeMLA)
April 3 – 6, 2014
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
Host: Susquehanna University


The humanities “affective turn” continues to resonate in the fields of literary and narratological studies. Like the linguistic, cultural, and ethical turns, the affective bears new modes of inquiry and brands of scholarship: studies of emotion, sensation, bodies, and so on. Yet, while this affective turn seems to contract thought, from communities to singular bodies, the extension of affect to literary study, conceived as a world of encounters, suggests a much wider field. Affect—circulating, ambient sensations—has been activated to understand senses of otherness, such as José Esteban Muñoz’s concept of “feeling brown,” as well as embodied responses to neoliberalism and capitalism, as may be perceived in Lauren Berlant or Steven Shaviro’s adaptations of “affective labor.”


Gregory J. Seigworth, editor of The Affect Theory Reader (Duke UP, 2010) and a widely-published, prominent scholar in the field of affect studies, will be joining this panel in the role of respondent.

I invite papers that examine how 20th and 21st-century literary and cultural narratives in America engage with structures of feeling and theories of affect. Topics of interest include (but are not limited to):


- National bodies/ communities as “structures of feeling” (see, Raymond Williams’ Marxism and Literature);

- Consequences that attend feelings of belonging or disconnection within a community or nation;

- The politics of affect in national or social formations;

- Ubanity, tolerance, or cosmopolitanism as affects, rather than subjectivities;

- The function or role of affect and emotion in border-crossing;

- The relatedness of affect to neoliberalism’s disciplinary and regulatory apparatus;

- Ethnic/ immigrant/ black American literatures and the use of narrative forms or genres as critical affect/ structures of feeling.


Please send any inquiries and your 250 – 500 word abstract, as a PDF or Word attachment, to Laurie Rodrigues: rodrigues.laurie@gmail.com.

Deadline: September 30, 2013
Please include with your abstract:
Name and Affiliation
Email address
Postal address
Telephone number
A/V requirements (if any; $10 handling fee with registration)

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