Newsletter of the Society for the History of Children and Youth
Number 4 | Summer 2004 |
NEWS FROM THE FIELD Janet Golden and David Pomfret, Editors Call for Papers: Two Conferences 3rd Global Conference: Making Sense of: Dying and Death, Vienna Austria This inter-disciplinary and multi-disciplinary research and publications project aims to create a forum for examining the links between living and dying, and some of the contradictions and paradoxes which arise that we appear to accept without question. For 2004, special preference will be given to papers dealing with issues surrounding the death of the unborn (e.g., stillbirth, miscarriage, pre-natal death, death in utero) and death by violence (to self as well as others). These issues ñ and the links between them - have so far been largely neglected in interdisciplinary conferences and publications. Yet it is only in such settings that the arbitrary curtailment of human life can be fully explored in all its forms and implications. The Steering Committee wish to encourage a forum which offers the possibility of bringing to the fore much of the full significance of these matters for the human condition today. Papers, presentations, reports and workshops are also warmly invited on any of the following indicative themes (or their combinations):
Papers will be considered on any related theme. 300 word abstracts should be submitted by Friday 3rd September 2004. Abstracts will be reviewed by the Organising Committee: Mira Crouch (School of Sociology, The University of New South Wales); Rob Fisher (Inter-Disciplinary.Net); and Asa Kasher (Laura Schwarz-Kipp Professor of Professional Ethics and Philosophy of Practice and Professor of Philosophy,Tel-Aviv University, Israel). Abstracts should be submitted by email in Word, WordPerfect, PDF or RTF formats; alternatively the abstract may be placed in the body of the email. Please send submissions to: Dr Rob Fisher rf@inter-disciplinary.net If accepted for presentation, 8 page draft conference papers should be submitted by Friday 19th November 2004. A themed hard copy volume has been published from the first meeting of this project; an ISBN eBook has been published and a hard copy themed volumed is in preparation from the second conference. All papers accepted for and presented at this conference will be published in an ISBN eBook. Selected papers accepted for and presented at the conference will be published in a hard copy themed volume(s).
Infantuation: Childhood, Youth, and Nineteenth-Century Culture, 26Th Annual Conference of the Nineteenth-Century Studies Association, Augusta, Georgia and Aiken, South Carolina – March 10-12, 2005 The deadline for submissions is October 15, 2004. For more information see http://www.h-net.org/announce/show.cgi?ID=138516 During the nineteenth century, you couldn’t turn a corner – or a page – without some broom-wielding urchin, be-ribboned cherub, or herd of baby buggies getting in your way. How much of this was due to an actual change in population and how much of it was the result of a shift in cultural focus? The NCSA invites proposals for papers addressing ways in which the nineteenth century developed, interpreted, or invented infancy, childhood, adolescence, and youth both as ontological categories and as phases in human and national development. The conference will be held in Augusta, Georgia (at the historic Partridge Inn) and Aiken, South Carolina. Augusta’s airport has frequent connections to Atlanta. The NCSA was founded to promote interdisciplinarity. We encourage proposal submitters to consider ways in which the attention to childhood and youth re-shaped fields such as medicine, art, nature, music, literature, politics, sexuality, race, ethnicity, and architecture. Possible topics include:
Proposals should consist of a one-page, single-spaced abstract (12 point font), with the title of the paper and author as heading; the paper must be able to be presented within 20 minutes. Proposals should be accompanied by a one-to-two page vita. Send materials to Program Director Ann Ross. E-mail submission to (or ) is preferred; for “snail” mail, address to as listed below. The deadline for submissions is October 15, 2004. Further information about registration and accommodations will be available in the Fall from Local Arrangements Director Suzanne Ozment, who may be contacted at the Office of Academic Affairs, University of South Carolina, Aiken, SC
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