12th Annual Shifting Tides Anxious Borders Conference – Binghamton University

Global Authoritarianisms and the Arts

12th Annual Shifting Tides Anxious Borders Conference

Hosted by the English Department, Binghamton University–SUNY

Date of Conference: April 29, 2023

Keynote Speaker: Dr. Jini Kim Watson, NYU

Since the beginning of the pandemic and following the eventful elections across the globe in the last few years, we have seen a renewed debate about a number of issues that represent deep, existential threats to civil discourse, bodily autonomy, socio-economic well-being, and ecological crisis as well as participation in the democratic political process. Sweeping anti-democratic legal changes across the world have undone the work of thousands of civil rights activists. These concerns have made themselves felt in the spaces of popular culture, and politics, as well as approaches to education, curriculum, and engagements with the past. Moral panics about race, class, caste, gender, and sexuality have materialized in legislation banning these topics, effectively gagging critical engagements with issues that affect and define the everyday experience of disenfranchised people. However, these moves and attitudes have been met with resistance across the globe that’s both powerful and creative. Art and literature have specifically played crucial roles in highlighting these complex phenomena, both at a macro level and at thinking through their interpersonal aspects.

In light of these concerns, this year’s STAB conference aims to address the following questions:

  • How have authors and scholars confronted conservative political formations historically?
  • What are some creative ways in which social and political movements have addressed crises historically?
  • How might genre or the politics of form impact the ways in which scholars, historians, and everyday people conceive of justice in precarious political and historical moments?
  • What do contemporary conversations in critical theory such as postcolonial theory, transnational studies, feminist studies, Black studies, and queer studies, among others, offer us by way of approaching this political situation today?
  • How does the ‘vampiric’ role that universities often play within local communities complicate their role as ‘beacons of progress’?

Please submit abstract proposals of 200 words or less, along with an author’s bio (not more than 2 pages) to stab.binghamton@gmail.com before February 28, 2023. Be sure to indicate any technical requirements as well. For queries or further information contact Kaushik Tekur: ktekurv1@binghamton.edu

About Steve Mentz 1265 Articles
I teach Shakespeare and the blue humanities at St. John's in New York City.

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