About these images


Login

Log in is required on this site ONLY to join an ASA member community group and contribute to the community blogs.

Are you a current ASA member?
Forgot your password?

Register

Register here for the annual meeting and to begin or renew an ASA membership

Register here to submit a proposal through the ASA's 2012 submission site.

Register here for JHU Press and ASA membership services, including online access to American Quarterly and the Encyclopedia of American Studies Online.

Register here to join an ASA community. Only current ASA members may contribute to the community blogs. Registration is not required to submit display or text ads or news and events or to view many pages. We will refuse posts that are not of professional interest to ASA members.

Click here for membership FAQ's

Member Tools

We're sorry. You are not yet a member of the Chesapeake American Studies Association.

Register or login to join this group.

Main | History | Contact | Contact Members

Chesapeake Chapter

New American Spaces: CFP Chesapeake American Studies Association Annual Conference 2010

What might “new American spaces” look like?  Spatial metaphors appear as characteristic American Studies concerns: groundwork, crossroads of culture, the local and the global, and crossing borders. We seek to extend this metaphor, calling for papers and panels from any disciplinary perspective that address what “new American spaces” have been, are, and might be. 

We believe that American spaces in metaphor, representation, design, policy, and practice can be examined in a wide array of contexts.  We invite papers that explore the origins, growth, change, or end of “American spaces” in any time period.  Specific areas for examination might include, but certainly are not limited to: green, virtual/real, public/private, home/homelessness, museum, blogospheric, performative, informational, diasporic, material, educational/pedagogical, immersive/3-D, political, homefront/battlefront, catastrophic, and working-class/elite spaces.

Please send single-page panel proposals, 100-word individual paper proposals, or ideas for innovative panels, presentations or performances as MS Word attachments to .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address).  We will also hold a poster session and welcome proposals from individuals or teams.  Please include the words “panel,” “individual,” “innovative,” or “poster” in the subject line. 

Speakers may be listed in the program for a maximum of two sessions.  While we welcome a range of panel formats, all panels should take no more than 75 minutes with at least 15 minutes reserved for audience discussion.

The deadline for proposals is January 11, 2010.

/ Graduate students from a range of disciplinary perspectives are encouraged to attend and present papers. / Please direct any questions to Diana Owen and Michael Coventry, conference co-chairs, Communication, Culture & Technology and American Studies Programs, Georgetown University: .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). / We will announce the speaker for the Richardson Lecture as soon as possible

By Jo B Paoletti, Sat, October 31, 2009 - 9:05 am
Categories: News

Add Your Comment

Name:

Email:
(not published)

Location:
(not published)

URL:

Submit the word you see below:


Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?