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Dear Colleagues,
I hope you'll consider submitting a proposal to or help us spread
the word about the John Carter Brown Library's "Sugar and Beyond" conference scheduled for
October 25-26, 2013. The conference is being co-organized by
Julie Chun Kim (English, Fordham), K. Dian Kriz (History of Art and
Architecture, Brown), and Chris Iannini (English, Rutgers).
The call for papers is included here, as well as in the attached pdf.
Sincerely,
Chris Iannini
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*Call for Papers: “Sugar and Beyond”*
A multidisciplinary conference sponsored by
The John Carter Brown Library, Providence, RI
October 25-26, 2013
*Organizers:* Christopher P. Iannini (Rutgers), Julie Chun Kim (Fordham),
K. Dian Kriz (Brown)
The John Carter Brown Library seeks proposals for a conference entitled
“Sugar and Beyond,” to be held on October 25-26, 2013, and in conjunction
with the Library’s Fall 2013 exhibition on sugar in the early modern
period, especially its bibliographical and visual legacies. The centrality
of sugar to the development of the Atlantic world is now well known. Sugar
was the ‘green gold’ that planters across the Americas staked their
fortunes on, and it was the commodity that became linked in bittersweet
fashion to the rise of the Atlantic slave trade. Producing unprecedented
quantities of sugar through their enforced labor, Africans on plantations
helped transform life not only in the colonies but also in Europe, where
consumers incorporated the luxury commodity into their everyday rituals and
routines.
“Sugar and Beyond” seeks to evaluate the current state of scholarship on
sugar, as well as to move beyond it by considering related or alternative
consumer cultures and economies. Given its importance, sugar as a topic
still pervades scholarship on the Americas and has been treated in many
recent works about the Caribbean, Brazil, and other regions. This
conference thus aims to serve as an occasion where new directions in the
study of sugar can be assessed. At the same time, the connection of sugar
to such broader topics as the plantation system, slavery and abolition,
consumption and production, food, commodity exchange, natural history, and
ecology has pointed the way to related but distinct areas of inquiry.
Although sugar was one of the most profitable crops of the tropical
Americas, it was not the only plant being cultivated. Furthermore, although
the plantation system dominated the lives of African and other enslaved
peoples, they focused much of their efforts at resistance around the search
for ways to mitigate or escape the regime of sugar planting. We thus
welcome scholars from all disciplines and national traditions interested in
exploring both the power and limits of sugar in the early Atlantic world.
Topics that papers might consider include but are not limited to the
following:
--The development of sugar in comparative context
--The rise of sugar and new conceptions of aesthetics, taste, and cultural
refinement
--Atlantic cultures of consumption
--Coffee, cacao, and other non-sugar crops and commodities
--Natural history and related genres of colonial description and promotion
--Imperial botany and scientific programs of agricultural expansion and
experimentation
--Alternative ecologies to the sugar plantation
--Plant transfer and cultivation by indigenous and African agents
--Provision grounds and informal marketing
--Economies of subsistence, survival, and resistance
--Reimagining the Caribbean archive beyond sugar: new texts and
methodological approaches
In order to be considered for the program, please send a paper proposal of
500 words and CV to jcbsugarandbeyond@gmail.com. The deadline for
submitting proposals is December 15, 2012.
Presenters will likely have some travel and accommodation subvention
available to them.
For more information: http://blogs.brown.edu/sugarandbeyond/ or email
Margot Nishimura, Deputy Director and Librarian (margot_nishimura@gmail.com
).
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