2016 ELLAK International Conference..
2016-12-06Celebrating William Butler Yeats 15..
2015-06-052015 ELLAK International Conference
2015-06-05Humanities and Healing- 2012.11.1-..
2015-06-05- N. Katherine Hayles, Duke University, USA
- Timothy Morton, Rice University, USA
- Wendy Chun, Brown University, USA
- Tom Cohen, SUNY-Albany, USA
- Jennifer Fay, Vanderbilt University, USA
- Yuk Hui, Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany
- Gregg Lambert, Syracuse University, USA
- Tony See, National University of Singapore, Singapore
- Chris Thouny, Kyushu University, Japan
- Iris van der Tuin, Utrecht University, Netherlands
The past several decades have witnessed renewed interest in space/spatiality―concept ualizations of space as both produced and producing, abstract and concrete, static and dynamic, material and discursive. From physical setting (place, region, environment, locale, landscape) to socioeconomic and political geo graphies (slavery, occupation, colonialism, imperialism, globalization, militarism, tourism), to lived experiences and identity categories |
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(private, public, gender, race, religion, sexuality, class),
space as an organization of society embodies
the overlapping, relational networks of human
societies, thereby manifesting the "spatial turn"
in literary and cultural studies and critical theory. The increasing mobility of people and cultures destabilizes the connection between geographic space and cultural identity. The pervasive influence of technology (such as robotics and computer networks) reorients our very definitions of physical space and the environment that we inhabit. The time has come to explore the ways in which we may re-imagine and re-define our spaces. |