PUB: Call for Papers: 30th Annual West Indian Literature Conference – DEADLINE EXTENDED « Repeating Islands

Call for Papers: 30th Annual West Indian Literature Conference – DEADLINE EXTENDED

The UWI Department of Liberal Arts invites scholarly papers for the 30th Annual West Indian Literature Conference, which it will host from 13-15th October, 2011. This conference will be themed “I Dream to Change the World”: Literature and Social Transformation.  

Caribbean culture and its productions continue to be critical instruments for imaginatively addressing the on-going imperative for social change and self-fashioning. George Lamming contends that the work of the Artist is to “return the society to itself”  “to its past” and to the “visions of the future” on which the present is constituted. Although such a function was originally directed to a confrontation with colonialism’s systemic erasure or misrepresentation of its others, an engagement that is never quite exhausted, Caribbean nation states must now call themselves to account for the outcomes of their Independence projects.   

The region must engage new questions about the quality of life now available to its citizens. It must confront with urgency the many challenges arising from all spheres of life, from its political culture, economic circumstances, gender politics and family life, marginalised groups, youth culture and entertainment industries, foreign media infiltration, crime and violence. No longer is it acceptable to point the finger at the past or to an external “other” as a source of blame. Nation states must engage the new sites and agents of oppression or negative social conditioning generated from within and beyond its borders in order to ask ourselves more responsibly: what are the requirements of the future?  

Equally important to this process is recognising the unique contributions the region’s literature and cultural life have to offer. Caribbean writers have long been engaged in theorizing identity and culture beyond monolithic paradigms that are mired in race and ethnic prejudices and so are a rich resource for ideological and social change that has relevance to the world. These offer fertile methodologies for (re) reading cultures and literatures that have historically read the region as, for instance, Barbara Lalla has demonstrated in her Caribbean readings of medieval literature.  

Indeed debates about the function of literature, from which the practice of criticism can hardly be excluded, are as old as the medium itself. Issues have ranged from literature’s necessary independence from politics of activism and its role in the work of social protest and change. The inescapable politics of textuality remains as pertinent an issue as the concern with the reduction of literature to politics.  For the developing world the stakes are even higher and in a Caribbean where the “culture of reading” remains the practice of the few, Lamming’s longstanding concern with finding more innovative ways to mediate the world of text to larger sections of the population is yet to be effectively addressed.  

The 30th Annual West Indian Literature Conference invites papers on the theme, “I Dream to Change the World”: Literature and Social Transformation. It welcomes presentations on a broad range of topics and in cultural mediums inclusive of literature, literary linguistics, film, visual arts, and popular culture. 

Also invited, are scholarly papers on a range of topics that include:

Dialogues on the Role of the Artist

Children’s Literature 

Caribbean Utopias and Dystopias: Reimagining the Future

Crime, Criminality and Literature

Repositioning the Transnational Caribbean 

Genders and Sexualities

Refashioning the Nation Representations of the Disabled

Landscape, Environment and Literature

Caribbean Literary Theory Comes of Age 

Pedagogues: Strategies for Mediating the Text

Caribbean, Social policy and Development

Representations of HIV/AIDS

Literature and Re-shaping Minds

Trauma and Healing

Representations of Mental Illness

Voicings and Inscriptions

Caribbean Debates on the Function of Literature and Criticism

Historical Formulations of Caribbean Literature

Aliens, Duppies and Others

Please submit an abstract of not more than 250 words and a short profile (approximately 150 words) by 31st May, 2011.

Submissions should be sent to Dr. Geraldine Skeete at Geraldine.Skeete@sta.uwi.edu, or Dr. Giselle Rampaul at Giselle.Rampaul@sta.uwi.edu.