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Spectres of Class: Representing social class from the French Revolution to the present day

Categoria
Data
Sex, 07/15/2011 - Qua, 07/13/2011
Término das inscrições
Rm CBK252, University of Chester, Parkgate Road, Chester, CH1 4BH United Kingdom

Please note the second call for papers for the interdisciplinary ‘Spectres of Class’ conference at the University of Chester, UK, on Friday 15- Saturday 16 July 2011 organised by the University of Chester English department in association with CADAAD (Critical Approaches to Discourse Analysis Across Disciplines).

We welcome abstracts of no more than 300 words by Friday 25 March 2011.

Abstracts should be emailed (attached as a word document) to matt.davies@chester.ac.uk and please include the sender’s name, position and contact details (including email).

Confirmed keynote speakers so far:

• Paul Kerswill, Professor of Sociolinguistics, University of Lancaster
• Dr Ruth Livesey, Reader in Nineteenth Century Literature and Thought, Royal Holloway, University of London

Call for Papers:
SPECTRES OF CLASS: Representing Social Class from the French Revolution to the Present

University of Chester, UK, 15 - 16 July 2011
This interdisciplinary conference seeks to give a name to one of many spectres haunting the West: the spectre of class (manifested as movements, protests, identities, and inequalities). The gap between the rich and poor in the UK is currently the widest since the Second World War, according to a 2010 report by the National Equality Panel and, as the consequences of global recession deepen, the cuts imposed by governments in the West are likely to exacerbate social inequalities. In response to these forces, the Spectres of Class conference will consider the ways in which class is represented in language, literature and other cultural formations since the French Revolution, seeking to understand the historical basis of class identities and their manifestations today. Class was a central preoccupation of academic discourse in the twentieth century. In the last twenty years, however, the emphasis on class identity has become less pronounced as academics explore the power imbalances associated with gender, ethnicity, sexuality, disability status and nationality. Many important studies have emerged from these investigations. However, class issues cut across all these areas and, in the current climate of economic uncertainty, the material basis of class identities may come to challenge poststructuralist notions of identity as a lifestyle ‘choice’.
We welcome papers on all aspects of the representation of class. Possible topics may include:

• Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA) studies of class, ideology, hegemony etc.
• Protest movements (e.g. student protests, Chartists, anti-Poll Tax Unions, trade union action)
• Material and cultural influences on class identities
• Rereading Marx
• Class as performative
• Social mobility/stasis
• Class cultures: bourgeois, aristocratic, gentry, working class
• Performances of class (art, music, theatre, photography, film and television)
• Corpus linguistic studies of ‘class’ in news media and other genres
• Representations of revolution and reform
• Humorous/satirical
representations of class

Organizer
Instituição
English Department, University of Chester, Old Vicarage, Parkgate Road, Chester, CH1 4BH, United Kingdom
Entre em contato com
Dr Matt Davies
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