‘QUARANTINE’
The 2010 Culture and Theory
Graduate Student Conference
Conference Date: Friday, April 30, 2010
Location: University of California, Irvine
Deadline for the submission of abstracts: February 5, 2010
Our conference theme was inspired by the cultural panics and anxieties that emerged out of the public discourse surrounding the H1N1 flu virus. Declared a national emergency by the ObamaThe 2010 Culture and Theory
Graduate Student Conference
Conference Date: Friday, April 30, 2010
Location: University of California, Irvine
Deadline for the submission of abstracts: February 5, 2010
Administration, our cultural imaginary on disease, health, and bodies has been become deeply
mired in discourses on inclusion and exclusion. These discourses are mobilized by racialized,
classed, sexualized, and gendered economies of representation that produce notions of who is
allowed access to the identities of ‘citizen’ and ‘national’. Our conference will look to the ways
that identities and bodies become sites of intense contestation both within these contemporary
discursive formations and through the pathologizing of racial, sexual, classed, and gendered
identities.
When thinking through the context of quarantine, some questions to consider might be: How
does biopower frame the conditions of possibility for quarantine? What affective transactions are
mediated by quarantine? How are bodies, desires, and sexualities pathologized in and through
practices of quarantine? How do modalities of closure and enclosure in discourses on the nation,
state, and belonging contribute to new mappings of identity? How are emerging technologies of
governance creating new methods and ways of thinking about quarantine?
Papers submitted to the conference do not need to directly address the H1N1 flu virus or its
discursive productions. Presenters are encouraged to ‘play’ with the theoretical possibilities that
a conference entitled ‘Quarantine’ allows. As Culture and Theory is a fundamentally
interdisciplinary program, we welcome submissions from a variety of disciplines, including but
not limited to: political science, literature/comparative literature, anthropology, sociology, visual
studies, studio arts, history, philosophy, area studies, Women’s and Gender studies, African-
American Studies, and Asian American Studies. Individual papers, panel proposals and joint
presentations are welcome.
Proposed topics/panels for the conference might include:
- panic/anxiety surrounding the H1N1 flu virus
- biopolitics, the regulation of bodies/populations, the disciplining of bodies/populations
- disability studies
- movement and displacement, migrations both voluntary and forced
- studies of motility and orientation, or impediments to motility and orientation
- the pathologizing of desire and sexuality
- the phenomenality of disease
- torture and prisoner abuse
- the racialization, gendering, or sexualization of disease
- illegal detentions or the practice of sequestering prisoners
- the disciplining of ‘alien’ bodies
- immigration control
- contemporary practices of segregation – racial, sexual, gendered, national
- citizenship and the nation, discourses on citizenship/inclusion and exclusion
- linguistic identities and the nation, language and bodies, ESL/bilingual education
- ‘walls’ – both figurative and literal (wall separating Israel and Palestine, U.S. and Mexico wall)
- borders, national boundaries, imaginaries on borders/boundaries
- theories of the state/state(s) of war/state(s) of nature
- technologies of the post-human, how we define the ‘human’
February 5th, 2010. If an abstract is accepted for the conference, a draft of the conference paper
should be submitted by Friday, April 16th, 2010.
Abstracts may be in Word, WordPerfect, or PDF/RTF formats and must include the following
information: a) Author; b) Institutional affiliation; c) Contact information and e-mail address;
d) Title of abstract; e) Abstract
We acknowledge receipt and answer to all paper proposals submitted.
Please send paper proposals to:
Jen Kosakowski
Ph.D. Candidate, Culture and Theory
University of California, Irvine
jkosakow@uci.edu
or
Diana Leong
Ph.D. Candidate, Culture and Theory
University of California, Irvine
dianaml@uci.edu
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