Congress 2015 Program Here - Association For Research in
Transcription
Congress 2015 Program Here - Association For Research in
May 31, 2015 | June 2, 2015 ARCYP Program: Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences University of Ottawa, ON May 31, 2015 3:00-4:15 PM ARCYP co-hosted with FSAC/ACEF (Room TBA) Jack Zipes, Professor Emeritus, University of Minnesota Keynote: Spreading the Word: The Dangerous Power and Magic of Memetic Tales The Congress theme highlights the power of ‘Capital Ideas’ that inspire the confluence of scholars for cross-disciplinary dialogue and debate that changes the ways people live and view the world. Dr. Jack Zipes’s keynote, “Spreading the Word: The Dangerous Power and Magic of Memetic Tales,” focuses on the strengths of cross-disciplinary work and scholarly convergence. Dr. Zipes will discuss how his work on the dissemination and relevance of folk and fairy tales exemplifies the bringing together of his study of folklore with memetics, evolutionary anthropology, philosophy, and cognitive sciences. Drawing upon his study of the persistent transmission of certain words in tales, Dr. Zipes will discuss why he believes that dilettantism and interdisciplinary thinking might enable folklorists and other interested scholars to explain the inexplicable. Dr. Jack Zipes is a professor emeritus of German and former director of the Center for German and European Studies at the University of Minnesota. He is one the most prolific editors and authors in the field of fairy tale and folklore studies as well as an internationally renowned translator and scholar. 4:15-6:00 PM Plenary roundtable Distinguished scholars in the field participate in this roundtable that follows the keynote lecture by Jack Zipes. Each panelist will highlight key questions/issues related to interdisciplinary research related to folk and fairy tales raised in the plenary. Participants will speak to the opportunities and challenges of interdisciplinary research as relevant to their own work. • • • • Cristina Bacchilega (University of Hawai’i-Mānoa) Pauline Greenhill (University of Winnipeg) Sadhana Naithani (Jawaharlal Nehru University) Jennifer Schacker (University of Guelph) Chair: Naomi Hamer (University of Winnipeg; ARCYP Executive) The keynote lecture and roundtable is co-hosted with FSAC/ACEF (Folklore Studies Association of Canada/Association Canadienne d’ethnologie et de folklore) with funding support from the Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences through the International Keynote Speaker Support Fund. This session is open to all Congress attendee 1 ARCYP Congress 2015 Program | May 31/June 2, 2015 June 2, 2015 ARCYP/ACCUTE program (Room TBA) 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM Roundtable: Fairytale remediations and the cultures of young people • • • • Kendra Magnus-Johnston (University of Manitoba) Elizabeth Marshall (Simon Fraser University) Jill Rudy (Brigham Young University) Catherine Tosenberger (University of Winnipeg) Chair: Naomi Hamer (University of Winnipeg; ARCYP executive) Roundtable description: “It has generally been assumed that fairy tales were first created for children and are largely the domain of children. But nothing could be further from the truth.” - Jack Zipes, Spells of Enchantment: The Wondrous Fairytales of Western Culture This roundtable provides an opportunity for a cross-disciplinary dialogue on the relationship between fairytale remediations and young people’s cultures. Fairy tale narratives continue to be dominant cultural venues for storytelling, often through the remediated forms of film, television, visual and performance art, and most recently through a range of digital fan cultures. Many of these remediations and their affiliated fan cultures subvert and/or explicitly challenge the assumption that fairy tales are “largely the domain of children.” The research highlighted in this roundtable explores how a range of fairy tale remediations extend or challenge familiar narratives in mainstream North American picture books, comics, television and film. 12:00 p.m.- 1:30 PM- Lunch break (no catering) 1:30 p.m.- 3:00 PM- ARCYP Annual General Meeting (catering) 3:15 p.m.- 5:00 PM Roundtable: Keywords in the Cultures of Young People Invited panel: • • • • • Kristine Alexander (University of Lethbridge) Nat Hurley (University of Alberta) Awad Ibrahim (University of Ottawa) Louise Saldanha (Douglas College) Lisa Weems (Miami University) Chairs: Elizabeth Marshall (Simon Fraser University; ARCYP Executive); Tyler Pollard (McMaster University; ARCYP Executive ) 2 ARCYP Congress 2015 Program | May 31/June 2, 2015 Roundtable description: In 1976, Denis Donoghue reviewed Raymond Williams’ Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society for the New York Times. He wrote that as a teacher Williams loved “to show where ideas begin and end, in principle, only to emphasize that in practice their beginnings and endings are incorrigibly wayward” (2). Adopting Williams’ commitment to incorrigibility, this roundtable encourages an approach to “keywords in cultures of young people” that acknowledges that language is erratic and unpredictable with varied sets of meanings and associations. Panelists will critically question and interrogate familiar keywords used in the study of cultures of childhood and youth, and propose new terms and definitions to capture and understand the complexities and contradictions that define young peoples’ cultures and texts. This interdisciplinary panel includes time for lively debate between panelists and the audience. 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. - ARCYP Annual Dinner and Drinks (location TBA) All members, participants, and attendees are welcome! See you there! Please visit our website, http://arcyp.ca or Facebook page, http://facebook.com/arcyp.ca for more information. For general information on Congress, and to register, visit http://congress2015.ca 3 ARCYP Congress 2015 Program | May 31/June 2, 2015