|
Call for papers: "Exappropriating the Human: Tele-technologies, Postcolonialism, and Their Convergence in Contemporary Globalization,"
seminar at the 2006 ACLA: American Comparative Literature Association Annual Conference, Princeton University, March 23-26, 2006. The goal of this seminar is to reflect upon the dehumanizing and uprooting capacity of language through the concept of "exapropriation," a term coined by Derrida in his later works. The term exappropriation, when applied to language, expresses the double move of how language puts the human in place (hands it the qualities that are proper to it, appropriation) and at the same time dehumanizes (pulls the human out of its proper place, expropriation). As Derrida puts it in Of Hospitality: "If it seems to be both, and by that very fact, the first and the last condition of belonging, language is also the experience of expropriation, of an irreducible exappropriation." It was Paul de Man who first called this "errancy of language which never reaches the mark, which is always displaced in relation to what it meant to react" to the inhuman. We will focus on the imminent convergence of the tele-technological and the (post)colonial uprooting of place and the human as witnessed in contemporary globalization. On the one hand we will define exappropriation in relation to literature and the tele-technologies that uproot and exapropriate language and place itself (telephone, television, e-mail). This is a path that is explored by Derrida himself when he characterizes these technologies as "machines that introduce ubiquitous disruption, and the rootlessness of place, the dislocation of the house, the infraction into the home." In this case, we encourage proposals for papers that address the intertwining of language, technology, and the inhuman in contemporary literature. On the other hand, we encourage the submission of papers that utilize "exapropriation" as a concept for the analysis of postcolonial literature and its uprooting instances of dehumanization. Please submit your paper proposal of 250 words before 30 November 2005 using the special form of submission on the ACLA website at <=http://webscript.princeton.ed...~acla06 href="http://webscript.princeton.edu/~acla06"http://webscript.princeton.edu/" title="http://webscript.princeton.edu/" target="_blank"http://webscript.princeton.ed...~acla06>. Contact: Kristian van Haesendonck at <kristian.vanhaesendonck@villanova.edu>.
|