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Monday, March 11, 2013

Canadian Associtation for American Studies Invites Propals for Papers

Canadian Association for American Studies invites proposals for papers for their conference "Total Money Makeover: Culture and the Economization of Everything". This conference will focus on the topic of culture and economics, but especially papers that privilege culture as a field of knowledge and subject the economic to its critical gaze. It will be held from October 24th-27th, 2013 at The University of Waterloo, Ontario. Deadline to submit papers: March 15th, 2013.

CALL FOR PAPERS
OCTOBER 24 - 27, 2013
THE UNIVERSITY OF WATERLOO
WATERLOO, ONTARIO
Sponsored by the Canadian Association for American Studies
http://caas2013.uwaterloo.ca/
"Total Money Makeover"$: Culture and the Economization of Everything
Economic models now occupy a central place in the analysis of American culture. The "hegemony of economic explanations of cultural practices" (Koritz 1999) has been with us for some time. Concepts such as "cultural capital," "the literary marketplace," and "modes of exchange" are regularly deployed to demystify culture's relationship with power and profit. As useful as economic models have been for opening up new avenues of analysis in American studies, we wonder if this turn to economy in American studies doesn't privilege economic models in ways that ought to be scrutinized. Indeed, it can be argued that the recent financial crises in the United States and Europe are consequences of unquestioned faith in the explanatory and organizing power of economics as a field of knowledge. We must ask whether the economization of everything, along with the dominance of economic models for analysis, has deprived culture, and cultural study more generally, of modes of resistance and a distinctive field of action. Is it possible or desireable, without reverting to an untenable idealism, to recover a sense of culture as a privileged domain?
The 2013 CAAS conference invites proposals for papers on the topic of culture and economics, but especially papers that privilege culture as a field of knowledge and subject the economic to its critical gaze.
Papers on other topics relevant to the interdisciplinary study of American culture, history, and society are also welcome.
Please submit abstracts of 300-words, along with a brief bio, to the conference organizers, Victoria Lamont and Kevin McGuirk, Department of English, University of Waterloo, at caas2013 [at] uwaterloo [dot] ca by March 15, 2013. Presentation time for papers is 20 minutes maximum. Panel submissions will also be considered.
$ With apologies to Dave Ramsey.
Some points of departure:
  • What is value?
  • economics as an art
  • materialisms (other than the economic)
  • alternative economics
  • ecologies versus economies
  • material culture between art and economics
  • art and commodification
  • art without money
  • art and class
  • art and philanthropy
  • "Money is a kind of poetry" (Wallace Stevens)/ Poetry is a kind of money
  • culture and economic anxiety
  • economic prosperity and cultural prosperity
  • figures of poverty and negation in culture
  • figures of the economic in culture (cultural capital, etc.)
  • the art market, the literary market
  • the artistic career as an economic phenomenon
  • economic metaphors we live by
  • making sense and making money
  • semiotics of money
  • culture and/as waste
  • the humanities, social sciences, and the commercialization of research
  • government and the subsidy of culture
  • stories of the economy in media and art
  • thematics of money, exchange, etc.
  • things, thingness and monetary value
  • histories of money
  • money and political cultures
  • labour and art/ leisure and art
  • "cultural work"/ cultural leisure
  • religion with and against profit
  • piety and/as resistance
  • "the creative class" and/or the uncreative
  • collecting culture for and against profit
  • idling, loafing and other unproductive activity