̾Ƶ is proud to announce its upcoming conference “A Language to Dwell In”: James Baldwin, Paris, and International Visions from 26-28 May 2016.
The conference will represent a broad international and interdisciplinary explorations of Baldwin’s life and writing, with a special emphasis on the Paris he inhabited, both what it was and what it is today as a result of the marks he left behind, and on his experiences in Europe, Africa, and Turkey. Stressing the importance of James Baldwin, the conference hopes to be an international point of intersection for all those interested in Baldwin’s writing from literary and cultural critics, to political activists, poets, musicians, publishers and historians. We seek the widest range of academic and public intellectual discussion around Baldwin’s work which has influenced so many and so much.
Opening Round Table Discussants:
D. Quentin Miller, Suffolk University, Boston Doug Fields, Manchester University Claudine Reynaud, Université Paul-Valéry, Montpellier Bill Schwarz, Queen Mary University, London Cora Kaplan, Queen Mary University, LondonPlenary Speakers:
Isabel Wilkerson, Pulitzer Prize-winning American journalist, and the author of . Bill Mullen, Purdue University Robert Reid-Pharr, CUNY Graduate Center James Campbell, Stanford University Call for PapersThe American University of Paris announces a call for papers for the International James Baldwin Conference to be held 26-28 May 2016 at the American University of Paris. Other Paris venues crucial to Baldwin’s experience of the city will be used as additional settings, thus taking conference participants into “Baldwin’s Paris.”
The Conference encourages broad international and interdisciplinary exploration of Baldwin’s life and writing, with emphasis on the Paris he inhabited (intermittently from 1948 onwards), both for what it was and for what it is today as a result of the marks he left behind. An emphasis on his versatility in terms of style, genre and socio-political concerns is also of primary concern. Stressing the importance of Baldwin’s life, work and literary relations, the conference will be an intersection for all those interested in Baldwin’s work: from literary and cultural critics, to scholars of gender and queer theory, to political activists, poets, filmmakers, historians and musicians as well. We seek a wide range of academic and public discussions which can engage with Baldwin’s work.
Topics may include but are not limited to:
Baldwin and Expatriate Paris: Friends and Enemies Baldwin as a Global Explorer: The Fire Yet Again? Global Influence: Baldwin’s Work in Non-U.S. Settings Baldwin in a Post-Racial Imaginary Baldwin and Genre Baldwin and Literary Journalism Baldwin and the Civil Rights Movement Teaching Baldwin Today Baldwin and the Other ArtsProposal for papers should include:
A brief (250-300 word) abstract A one to two page vita.Submissions to Alice Craven at acravenaup.edu and William Dow at wdowaup.edu
Deadline for Submissions: December 1, 2015.