Events

25-26 May 2020 - Entangled Modernities: New Directions in Settler Colonial and Critical Indigenous Studies

Entangled Modernities: New Directions in Settler Colonial and Critical Indigenous Studies
25-26 May 2020

University of Kent

Entangled Modernities: New Directions in Settler Colonial and Critical Indigenous Studies

Entangled Modernities: New Directions in Settler Colonial and Critical Indigenous Studies

Keynote Speaker: Alice Te Punga Somerville (University of Waikato)

In the last two decades, new methodologies have emerged for analysing the entanglements between European and non-European histories in sites of colonisation. Settler Colonial Studies has emerged as an interdisciplinary project that seeks to move beyond frameworks dominated by questions of race and identity, and towards a transnational analysis of settler colonialism as a structure with its own particular and distinct logics and practices. However, despite the critical stance towards imperial and colonial ideologies and practices, many scholars in Critical Indigenous Studies have argued persuasively that Settler Colonial Studies undermines the Indigenous activist standpoint and replicates colonial power. In this reading, the structural approach of Settler Colonial Studies ‘posits a structural inevitability to settler colonial relations that leaves no space for individual agency for both Indigenous people and settler colonists alike’.[1]

In literary studies, the ‘transnational turn’ in American, Victorian and Romantic Studies has led to a critical reassessment of nationalist literary historiographies that efface the influence of colonisation on Anglophone literary culture during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. In recent years, frameworks from Critical Race and Indigenous Studies, as well as those from new imperial history, globalisation theory and Settler Colonial Studies, have led to a critical re-examination of the role that colonisation and colonial practices of knowledge gathering had on British and American literary culture, and a renewed focus on the literary cultures and institutions of the settler colonies.

This symposium, a collaboration between the Centre for Indigenous and Settler Colonial Studies at the University of Kent and the ERC SouthHem project at University College Dublin, aims to bring scholars and activists working in Critical Indigenous Studies and Settler Colonial Studies into closer dialogue with those working in the fields of transnational American Studies and Global Victorian and Romantic Studies. It aims to produce new research collaborations and methodologies for critically examining the complex cultural entanglements between the various European and non-European cultures operating under the conditions of colonisation during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

We invite proposals for panels, papers and other forms of presentation that speak to one or more of the following topics:

  • The impact of the ‘transnational turn’ on analyses of Indigenous/settler relations
  • Indigenous and settler mobilities: migration, emigration, colonisation, displacement, enslavement, indenture
  • Indigenous survivance and resistance
  • Indigenous and settler identities that exceed, resist or complicate the Indigenous/settler binary
  • Indigenous and settler print culture
  • The problems inherent in accessing Indigenous texts through the colonial archive
  • Temporal disjunctions in representations of colonial modernity and Indigenous peoples/cultures in print culture
  • The role of Indigenous people in colonial knowledge networks
  • The problematics of pre-modern/modern/post-modern
  • Methodological frameworks such as colonial, settler colonial, postcolonial, decolonial
  • Geographical scales beyond the nation state: global; transnational; transregional; oceanic
  • Postcolonial Digital Humanities and Indigenous Data Sovereignty

300 word abstracts, along with short bios, to be submitted to Dr. Lara Atkin L.E.Atkin@kent.ac.uk by Friday 28 February 2020.

A limited number of travel bursaries to cover UK travel are available for PGRs and precariously employed ECRs. If you wish to be considered for one of these please also include a brief description of your research interests and reasons for wanting to attend, and a CV.

[1]Corey Snelgrove, Rita Kaur Dhamoon and Jeff Corntassel, ‘Unsettling Settler Colonialism: The Dis- course and Politics of Settlers, and Solidarity with Indigenous Nations’, Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education & Society 3, no. 2 (2014).

For reflections on the conference, see: https://modernistreviewcouk.wordpress.com/2020/10/23/online-events-dialogue-1/