Thursday, August 19, 2010

CFP: LAST CALL De-Centering Cold War History: Street Level Experiences & Global Change, Tucson Arizona, Nov. 4-7, 2010

Cold War histories are often told as stories of national leaders, state policies and the global confrontation that pitted a Communist Eastern Block against a Capitalist West. We acknowledge the important consequences of this global competition, of the arms race, and of international diplomacy and detente, but we seek to bring together scholars who contribute new analytical approaches to reveal the complexities in the historical trajectory of the Cold War. To this end, we plan to engage in a collaborative effort to present and publish a street-level history of the global Cold War era. As three collaborators from different fields, we issue this CFP first for a Conference Presentation at the University of Arizona (November 4-November 7, 2010). Second, we will publish selected conference presentations in a Special Edition Journal. We invite contributions that challenge Cold War master narratives with a focus on super-power politics and de-center a historical narrative that situates the Soviet Union and the United States at the core and the rest of the world in the periphery. Your analytical approach should consider local-level experiences and regional initiatives that contributed to the making of a Cold War world; all geographical regions are welcome and cross-disciplinary approaches are encouraged. Our primary goal is to inspire a fruitful dialogue and new forms of collaboration among interdisciplinary scholarly approaches and to forge new research directions in the study of the Cold War.

At the Conference, we envision a combination of intensive workshops among participants, as well as panels and presentation open to the public. We ask Conference participants to arrive by Thursday. Friday and Saturday will be structured around presentations for the public in the mornings (Friday and Saturday, 9:00 10:45 AM and 11:15 to 1:00 PM), and workshops with participants in the afternoons (Friday and Saturday, 3:00 to 6:00 PM). Conference participants (and journal contributors) will receive reimbursement for travel to Tucson, Arizona, to attend the Conference; this invitation will include food and accommodation (three nights) on location.

Please send your 500-word proposal for an individual presentation and a short curriculum vitae (latest by August 25, 2010) to:

Project Director:
Jadwiga Pieper Mooney (Department of History, University of Arizona)
jadwiga@email.arizona.edu

Collaborators:
Fabio Lanza (Departments of History and East Asian Studies, University of Arizona)
flanza@email.arizona.edu

Elizabeth Oglesby
(Departments of Geography and Latin American Studies, University of Arizona)
eoglesby@email.arizona.edu

In your proposal, please indicate your name, institutional affiliation, address, e-mail address and what kind of audiovisual equipment you will need, if any.

Selected participants will be informed by September 15, 2010.


Project Director:
Jadwiga Pieper Mooney (Department of History, University of Arizona)
jadwiga@email.arizona.edu

Collaborators:
Fabio Lanza (Departments of History and East Asian Studies, University of Arizona)
flanza@email.arizona.edu

Elizabeth Oglesby
(Departments of Geography and Latin American Studies, University of Arizona)
eoglesby@email.arizona.edu

2 comments:

Owlfarmer said...

This has nothing to do with the CFP, but I wanted to let you know that I happened on your blog because of your notes on A Pail of Oysters. The book had recently been recommended to me by a reporter in Taipei who had himself happened on my blog because I occasionally post about my childhood in Taiwan (I left in 1962 at 15). At any rate, I surfed a bit through some of your posts (no time to do a thorough job) and found some interesting stuff. Mainly I wanted to thank you for the link to Better World Books. I don't like ordering from Amazon, but occasionally end up ordering books on line and these folks seem to have a good selection and a solid purpose.

Anyway, I'll look back in, but thought you might like to know that you've got a new reader.

Jonathan Benda said...

Thanks for your comment! I don't do much on this blog these days, but maybe I'll get back into it once I get some big projects out of the way...

I looked around your blog, too, because I was curious about your experience in Taiwan. I'll have to check back again!