Call for Papers: Graduate Student Conference - Cycles, Continuity, and Change in the Post-Soviet World

Vadim Shneyder vadim.shneyder at YALE.EDU
Thu Nov 4 17:13:28 UTC 2010


Dear SEELANGers,

Call for Papers

The Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures at Yale University would
like to invite submissions for the Annual Graduate Student Conference:

Cycles, Continuity, and Change in the Post-Soviet World

April 14-15, 2011, Yale University, New Haven, CT

The collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 appears as a boundary between two
distinct periods in geopolitics, history, and culture. More than that, it
emerges as an irrevocable break, separating the era of a bipolar global
balance of power from the widely perceived universal triumph of liberal
democracy and the ‘end of history.’ Now, on the twentieth  anniversary of
the disintegration of the only supposed alternative to a spreading
globalized culture, we wish to explore the ways in which the complex
movement of history interferes with clean temporal delimitations. What has
changed in the last two decades and what has not? What is repeating itself
and what is emerging anew? How do the histories of media, technologies, and
the proliferation of global cultural networks accentuate or militate against
the periodization of history according to the life-cycles of superpowers?
What of the desire of human beings to overcome chronological time by giving
themselves over to utopianism or nostalgia? Motivated by these questions, we
initiate this conversation, hoping in the process to learn how literary,
cinematic, and other types of cultural production have responded to the
changes and developments in the physical, cultural, and conceptual terrain
of the former Soviet Union.

Topics may include, but are by no means limited to:

   - Utopianism after socialism;
   - Nostalgia for the Soviet past;
   - Cultural memory and cultural amnesia;
   - Representations of war: Great Patriotic War, Afghanistan, Chechnya,
   Georgia/Ossetia;
   - Censorship and self-censorship in television and mass media: legacies
   and new developments;
   - Reconfiguration of center-periphery relations in contemporary Russia
   (Moscow vs. regions; Russia vs. Former Soviet republics; Russia vs.
   Western/Central/Eastern Europe);
   - Cultural mobility: writers and artists from the periphery as leading
   cultural figures;
   - New waves of emigration/immigration, Russian diasporas abroad and
   Caucasian/Central Asian migrants in Russia;
   - New cultural relations among Slavic peoples;
   - Rewriting history: nationalism, mythology, and historiography in the
   former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe;
   - Internet and new media as a form of cultural production;
   - Genealogy of contemporary Russian film;
   - Post-Soviet historical films;
   - Soviet and post-Soviet responses to Hollywood cinema;
   - The Soviet school of translation: tradition lost?


Presentations may not exceed 20 minutes.
Please submit abstracts of no more than 250 words to
yaleslavicconference at gmail.com by January 15, 2010. Please include paper
title, name, institution, department, email & phone. Open to graduate
students only.

Sincerely,

Graduate Students, Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, Yale

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