post-doc Mellon Sawyer Seminar Series on Territorial Roots and Diasporic Routes: Native American and Indigenous Cultural Politics in the America UT AUSTIN

Kelly McDonough kelly.mcdonough at austin.utexas.edu
Thu Jan 30 16:47:38 UTC 2014


Please post widely:

Mellon Sawyer Seminar Series Post-doctoral Fellowship

*Territorial Roots and Diasporic Routes: *

*Native American and **Indigenous Cultural Politics in the Americas*

University of Texas at Austin

Native American and Indigenous Studies (NAIS) and the Teresa Lozano Long
Institute of Latin American Studies (LLILAS) invite applications for *a
one-year post-doctoral fellowship* with the Mellon Sawyer Seminar
Series on Territorial
Roots and Diasporic Routes: Native American and Indigenous Cultural
Politics in the Americas (description follows).

The successful candidate will show interest in dialogue and theory across
North-South divides in indigenous studies, and ideally will have research
or practical experience in both realms. Applicants must have received their
Ph.D. degrees within the last five (5) years. Disciplinary specialization
is open. The successful candidate must show exceptional scholarly promise
and will be expected to co-coordinate and participate in the bi-weekly
Sawyer Seminar series, which will draw indigenous scholars from throughout
the hemisphere. The fellow will be located either in NAIS or LLILAS,
depending on primary research focus, and is expected to interact with
faculty and students from both units. Appointment will begin September 1,
2014, and will provide a stipend of $45,000, plus standard benefits. To
apply, please send a letter of application, curriculum vitae, dissertation
abstract, and brief description of current research agenda via
Interfolio (*apply.interfolio.com/24286
<http://apply.interfolio.com/24286>*).  Three letters of recommendation
must be submitted separately through Interfolio. All materials should be in
pdf format.  All materials must be received by February 21, 2014, to be
considered. Background check conducted on applicant selected.  The
University of Texas at Austin is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity
Employer.


 *Description of the Sawyer Seminar Series:*
The seminar series will explore the relationship between indigenous
territory and diaspora in the Americas.  We depart from the understanding
that, while there is an assumed incompatibility between "indigenous"
(original to a place) and "diaspora" (dislocated from an original space),
this dichotomy obscures the lived experiences of indigenous peoples, who
have been in movement for various reasons, including population pressures,
forced relocation, war, territorial dispossession, and "voluntary" labor
migration (to name just a few).  While these processes have generated
tensions in relation to place-based identities and claims to territorial
homelands, indigenous peoples have also creatively engaged these tensions,
refashioning their sense of belonging, adapting cultural resources to new
conditions, reframing claims to rights, and generating new forms of
political organization. This territory-diaspora relationship provides the
first axis of dialogue for the Seminar.  The second axis is geographic:
although joined by common histories of colonial oppression and a
foundational relationship to the earth, and unified by many
cultural-political affinities, indigenous peoples of North and South also
have substantively divergent experiences. While in the past these
differences have generated obstacles to efforts of hemispheric organization
and of comparative analysis, some of the most exciting emergent trends in
indigenous studies directly engage, rather than avoid, these tensions.
This Seminar will encompass cases from both North and South in the realms
of language, identity, cultural production, and political organization.
These discussions will seek understandings that bridge North-South
differences and illuminate the ways indigenous communities are negotiating
the complexities of the territory-diaspora throughout the hemisphere.

-- 
Kelly McDonough
Assistant Professor
Department of Spanish and Portuguese
The University of Texas at Austin
1 University Station B3700
Austin, TX 78712-1611
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