CFP: The Two Canaries of Climate Change - Island and Polar Places

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Jun 14, 2017, 10:00:31 PM6/14/17
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The Two Canaries of Climate Change -



Island and Polar Places



 



Call for Papers



 



South Pacific Association for Commonwealth Literature and
Language Studies Conference



14th - 16th
February 2018



UNE FutureCampus,
Parramatta, NSW





The Two Canaries Conference marks the 20th anniversary of the Kyoto
Protocol, the pioneering international treaty on greenhouse gas emissions to which,
in December 1997, 192 nations put their signatures. It is the first official
conference of the re-envisioned South Pacific branch (SPACLALS) of the
Association for Commonwealth Language and Literature Studies (ACLALS) and is
supported by the University of New England, Armidale, NSW.



 



The climate is warming, frigid zones
melting, seas rising. Yet to date only 75 nations have extended their
commitment to the Kyoto Protocol by ratifying the Doha Amendment (2012). There
are two kinds of canary in the climate system, sounding advance warnings of
climate change – melting Polar Regions and shrinking islands. This conference
invites proposals from scholars working across the literary imaginings of either/or
both.



 



For centuries islands and Polar Regions have loomed large in the
imaginations of authors, artists, explorers and travel writers, evoking diverse
and sometimes contradictory utopian/dystopian images: in the case of islands,
isolation, escapism, exoticism, femininised beauty and sexuality, alterity and
transformation; in the case of the Polar Regions, again isolation and escapism,
but also suffering, deprivation, emptiness, manly self-sacrifice and heroism.
Both locales also have provided focal landscapes for sublime and gothic modes
of apprehension. Now these images are giving way to more fluid associations,
attenuating the conceptual distance between them and the rest of the world,
clearly instating the importance of both in the global scheme of things.
Isolationist discourses are a luxury we can no longer afford. What can
literature and literary study offer? How do we move beyond (in Paul Sharrad’s
words) the “free-floating globalized cosmopolitanism” of continental thinking?



 



This conference aims to explore the intricate connections between
language, literature and ecology that both islands and Polar Regions uniquely generate
and evoke.  While SPACLALS has an
historical commitment to the languages and literatures of the Commonwealth, it
also welcomes papers on postcolonial literatures and other media from other
places and/or written in languages other than English. The following list of
focal themes is a guide only and is in no way meant to be restrictive.



 



·        
The Kyoto Protocol: before and after



·        
Island discourses / Polar discourses



·        
Literature, science, geopolitics and culture



·        
Literary geographies and ecologies



·        
Writing the ecological hotpot



·        
Lost places, disappearing places:
melting/drowning



·        
The storying of displaced cultures



·        
Ecological conflict / collaboration in cli-fi



·        
Responsibility, advocacy, engagement



·        
Sea lords / sea rights



·        
Transits, thresholds, interconnectivities



·        
Nomadism, migration and resettlement



·        
The Pacific Solution: detention and deterrence



·        
Island and Arctic communities in literature



·        
Indigenous Agencies



·        
Life Writing / Travel Writing: Island and
Arctic identities / spaces



 



Please submit abstracts of 250 words, and a
100-word bio note, to Dr Melinda Graefe (melinda...@flinders.edu.au) by 31
July 2017.



 



All other enquiries to Professor Russell
McDougall (rmcd...@une.edu.au).

 ______________________________________________________________
Dr Alice Gorman
T: @drspacejunk
M: 0428 450 418
B: http://zoharesque.blogspot.com.au/
The Conversation: https://theconversation.com/profiles/alice-gorman-4234/articles
______________________________________________________________

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