We invite your ideas for "big idea" sessions for
the 2019 AFS Annual Meeting in
Baltimore. Which questions and concepts exercise us all as folklorists,
regardless of our daily preoccupations, areas of concentration, or sphere of work?
Which broader social questions can folklorists particularly address? The goal
is to schedule a small number of big-tent conversations across the field that
may serve to make folkloristic achievements more cumulative and folkloristic
debates more consequential. Subject to revision, the plan is to schedule one or
two AFS President-proposed sessions and two or three member-proposed sessions
annually, depending on proposals.
Successful proposals will make the case for their topic as a
critical issue for folklore studies itself and/or an issue of general scholarly
and societal importance into which the work of folklorists might offer new
insight. Preferred sessions will assemble, to the degree possible,
- Participants who have not yet
conversed intensely with one another
- Perspectives from different
zones of practice and professional involvement in the field, including
earlier historical moments and non-US settings as well as the current
range of US folkloristic engagements
- Diversely situated and
identified participants
- Diverse theoretical and
methodological perspectives
- Diverse examples or case
studies in genre, ethnographic setting, context of practice, etc.
To have your panel considered under this rubric, email lcashman@indiana.edu by February 28 with a proposal,
including a preliminary list of panel participants. AFS may provide assistance,
as needed, to find additional participants to bring diverse perspectives to
accepted sessions. Sessions not selected for the "big idea"
designation may still be submitted for review through the regular proposal review
process.
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου