Reminder: CFP: : "Conceptualizing the Human," Student Conference, Princeton Univ, Oct 18-19, 2013

Emily Wang emily.ambrose.wang at GMAIL.COM
Mon Jun 3 19:20:18 UTC 2013


*CALL FOR PAPERS:*


 *Conceptualizing the Human in Slavic and Eurasian Culture*

Princeton University, October 18-19, 2013

An Interdisciplinary Graduate Student Conference

Princeton University Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures


 *Keynote Speaker: Prof. Mikhail Iampolski, NYU*



 *Conceptualizing the Human* is an interdisciplinary conference dedicated
to the changing concept of the human in Slavic and Eurasian culture. While
scholars, including Slavicist Mikhail Epstein, have recently devoted much
attention to the “crisis in the humanities,” our conference will turn to
the many ways in which “the human” has been perceived, re-imagined,
interrogated, and critiqued.


 The 1917 revolution induced a radical re-evaluation of what it meant to be
human among Russian intellectuals. In the Soviet Union, writers like
Platonov, Bulgakov, and Zamiatin envisioned how the human being might
transform itself under changing social conditions. New technologies
influenced Gastev’s and Vertov's close scrutiny of the mechanics of human
action. In the first Czechoslovak Republic, Karel Čapek posed the question
of what it means to be human in physical and cognitive terms in his
science-fiction prose, as well as in terms of ethical judgment and the
pursuit of truth in his mid-1930s trilogy. Earlier, thinkers such as
Fyodorov, Chernyshevsky, Dostoevsky, and the Decembrists incorporated
fantasies or critiques of the “new man” into their thought, while
contemporary writers like Sorokin and Pelevin have used images of physical
violence to challenge traditional notions of human dignity.


 In keeping with the wide-ranging possibilities of this topic, we welcome
proposals from scholars working in all relevant sub-fields of Slavic, East
European, and Eurasian Studies, such as literature, anthropology, history,
political science, cultural studies, film studies, philosophy, and theology.



 Paper topics could include, but are not limited to:


 − Humans, animals, and the environment

− Humans, machines, cyborgs, and biomechanics

− Encounters with the non-human, e.g., in Stanisław Lem’s *Solaris*

− The influence of gender on human identity

− The New Soviet Man

− Human development: experiences of childhood

– Central and Eastern European depictions of 20th-century history as
narratives of the failure of humanity

− 19th-century philosophies of freedom, individualism, and human dignity

− The problem of the human in Russian religious thought

− Psychiatric narratives of mental illness; the sick body

− Embodiment in the theater; “playing” human onstage

– Deconstructing the human; posthumanism




 *Conference Format*


 The goal of the conference is to provide graduate students with the chance
to present their work to senior scholars in the field and to receive as
much constructive feedback as possible. All papers will be made available
prior to the conference through the conference website. At the conference
each presenter will be given 5-10 minutes to introduce his or her paper,
followed by commentary by the panel discussant and open discussion.



 *Submission Details*


 Submit abstracts (around 300 words, no more than 500) to
princeton.slavic.conference[at]gmail.com. In addition, please include your
CV, departmental affiliation, email address, and the title of your proposed
paper. The deadline for submissions is *June 14, 2013*.


 We will be able to provide travel subsidies for the conference presenters,
as well as lodging for the nights of October 17 and 18.



 Any questions should be addressed to princeton.slavic.conference[at]
gmail.com.


 Organized by the graduate students of the Slavic Department of Princeton
University. Head organizers: Alisa Ballard, Emily Wang, and Denis
Zhernokleyev.

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