REMINDER - "Sots-Speak: Regimes of Language under Socialism"
Petre Petrov
ppetrov at PRINCETON.EDU
Wed Feb 9 23:49:39 UTC 2011
Just a reminder that the submission deadline for proposals has been pushed to
February 17.
*************
CALL FOR PAPERS
SOTS-SPEAK: REGIMES OF LANGUAGE UNDER SOCIALISM
May 20-22, 2011
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY
DEPARTMENT OF SLAVIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
The attempt to build communism in Eastern Europe was accompanied by the
development of a distinctive language paradigm, first in the Soviet Union, then
by a process of cultural translation and local adaptationin the satellite
states of the Socialist Bloc. The official discourse possessed its own speech
genres (tied to specific communicative contexts, social roles, and political
tasks), easily recognizable rhetorical patterns and lexical peculiarities. It is
intuitively obvious that this discourse, which we provisionally label sots-
speak, was instrumental in legitimizing and perpetuating the political system, in
shaping individual psychologies and cultural expressions. However, our
knowledge of its exact nature and practical existence remains sketchy, as the
topic still awaits systematic research. The aim of this conference is to bring
together scholars whose work helps shed light on the politico-ideological
idiom(s) of state socialism, so that we can begin to develop a sophisticated,
multi-layered picture of this special universe of discourse. A deeper
understanding of its constitutive linguistic features and the tendencies that
define its evolution represents a major desideratum on its own; yet we see this
understanding as prerequisite for engaging in questions of broader cultural
significance and soliciting a range of (inter)disciplinary inquiries (sociolinguistics,
social psychology, anthropology, philosophy, cultural and literary studies,
political science, etc.). The following questions merely suggest a few general
ways in which to frame our investigation; each of the areas can be illuminated
through analysis of specific topics:
* What is the relation between the linguistic theories and utopias of the
cultural avant-garde and the linguistic regimes of state socialism?
* Can we isolate and analyze expressive features uniquely native to these
regimes? What are the stable rhetorical patterns and lexical inventories of sots-
speak? What communicative functions do they serve?
* What was the social reception of the ideological tongues of socialism in the
Soviet Union and Eastern Europe? How can we study the dynamic between
inherited mentalities and the novel linguistic paradigms?
* What is the relationship between language and political power? What powers
are invested or (assumed to reside) in language? How effective was official
language in fulfilling the functions with which it was charged? How do we know?
What determines this efficacy?
* What is the relationship between signified and signifier in sots-speak,
between ideological meaning and its material carrier? How does it change over
time (the fading of meaning, the publics de-sensitization toward the appeal of
ideologically charged language, etc.)?
* How are social roles and identities concretely played and claimed in the use
of official idiom (the performance Stephen Kotkin has called speaking
Bolshevik)?
* Does sots-speak presuppose a distinctive kind of relay between
speaker/author and recipient/audience? What is the dynamic of stated and
implied meaning in this discourse? How are unstated meanings coded and
deciphered in specific discursive genres and situations?
* What values (representational, stylistic, semantic) does sots-speak assume
when it is taken up into artistic discourse?
* What constitutes linguistic dissidence under state socialism? What are the
subversive appropriations of the official idiom in everyday life, unofficial folklore,
and artistic texts?
* What has been the posthumous fate of sots-speak? With what new
value(s) has it been invested after the end of state socialism in Russia and
Eastern Europe?
We invite abstracts of no more than 300 words, accompanied by a short CV, to
be submitted by February 17, 2011 to fried at ujc.cas.cz
Inquiries regarding the conferences topic, organization, or submission process
should be directed to ppetrov at princeton.edu
Those selected to give presentations will be contacted in early March, 2011.
All participants must submit a full version of their paper by April 22, 2011; the
papers will be posted on the conference's website and remain available for the
duration of the event.
We expect to be able to offer a limited number of travel subsidies to
participants from abroad.
Program committee:
Petre Petrov (Princeton)
Mirjam Fried (Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague)
Eliot Borenstein (NYU)
Serguei Oushakine (Princeton)
Kevin Platt (University of Pennsylvania)
http://slavic.princeton.edu/events/calendar/detail.php?ID=2027
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Use your web browser to search the archives, control your subscription
options, and more. Visit and bookmark the SEELANGS Web Interface at:
http://seelangs.home.comcast.net/
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
More information about the SEELANG
mailing list