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Could I please have the following posted on the linganth list?<br>
<br>
Thank You,<br>
Don Kulick<br>
<br>
<font face="Garamond" size=4>CALL FOR PAPERS FOR AAA 2001 ON “LANGUAGE
& DESIRE” <br>
<br>
Dear colleagues,<br>
<br>
Deborah Cameron (U of London), and I are preparing a panel for this
year’s AAA on the topic of “Language and Desire”, and we would welcome
submissions from interested anthropologists and linguists. <br>
<br>
In the panel, we are interested in exploring a dimension of performative
theory that, to date, has not received much empirical attention; namely,
how the saying of something, in important ways, is structured by what
remains unsaid, or unsayable. Our own desire to explore this topic arises
from our engagement with literature on language and gender and on
language and sexuality, and our concern that much of that literature only
engages with “performance” (what is seen and explicitly said), as opposed
to “performativity”, which highlights the processes through which
subjectivities are generated and made possible. <br>
<br>
Touchstones for the kind of investigation we envisage can be found in
Deborah Cameron’s paper in the book <i>Language & Masculinity</i>
(Johnson & Meinhof, eds. 1997), my own paper on “Gay and lesbian
language” in the <i>Annual Review of Anthropology</i> (2000), Michael
Billig’s recent book <i>Freudian Repression</i> (1999), Kira Hall’s paper
“Lip service on the fantasy lines” (in Hall & Bucholtz 1995), and the
edited volume <i>Language & Desire</i> (Harvey and Shalom 1997). Most
of that work focuses on erotic desire. While this is of great interest,
erotic desire is not the only kind of desire that exists, and we also
welcome contributions that discuss other modalities of desire as well.
One issue that contributors might want to explore is how various kinds of
desire become bound up with, or separated from, erotic desire.<br>
<br>
We are most interested in papers that tackle the problem of how we can
actually identify and examine desire in talk or in mediated expressive
forms, such as the Internet. However, we also welcome theoretical
contributions, and papers that investigate the ways in which desire is
generated, structured, and disseminated in a variety of social and
cultural discourses. <br>
<br>
Potential topics include:<br>
- language and intimacy<br>
- the linguistic evocation of public/private distinctions<br>
- the language socialization of desire <br>
- language and ritual/religious desire<br>
- “passing” as an expression of desire to be, or be seen as, a particular
kind of person<br>
- desire in the peer-interactions of children and adolescents<br>
- how various ideologies (heteronormative, patriarchal, colonial) are
maintained through the construction of particular silences in discourse
<br>
- a discussion of different theories of desire and their relevance for
linguistic anthropological investigations<br>
<br>
Please address all queries and expressions of interest to
Don.Kulick@man.ac.uk by 29 February 2001.<br>
<br>
Sincerely,<br>
Don Kulick<br>
Professor <br>
University of Manchester<br>
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