Nov 23, 2009

CfP: "Walls and the City", Ghent, Belgium

CALL FOR PAPERS: WALLS AND THE CITY
DEADLINE, DECEMBER 1ST, 2009

I would like to bring to your attention the following call for papers for a main session at the next International Conference on Urban History, to be held in Ghent (Belgium) between the 1st and 4th of September 2010.

Main session 17: WALLS AND THE CITY

In contemporary Europe walls are far from being an old-fashioned device. Even if after the collapse of the Berlin Wall borders within EU-Schengen countries have became progressively flexible and porous, borders towards non-EU countries have became increasingly policed and fortified. In fact, walls still serve to keep people in, as much as to keep people out; they display power in concrete and symbolic terms. For some they might signify security and regularity, freedom and protection, identity and divergence as experiences to be held either inside or outside the line of the wall; for others they represent exclusion, marginalisation and stigma. In sum, walls (both real and imagined) demarcate, they chart the city-fabric and the nature of people’s civic and civil spirit, engagements and interactions.

In this panel we seek to make explicit the paradoxes of confinement and liberty that underpin the existence of walls in contemporary European cities. By observing the material morphology and location of walls in the modern urban fabric, we seek to understand the multiple interpretations and representations they embody. The following issues might be taken as a guide for paper proposals:
• Walls as visible objects.
• Walls as invisible processes of control and security.

Social underpinnings of walling processes in contemporary cities: the rebirth of old devices to produce new ghettoised communities.
• Adoption and adaptation of walls as devices to order peoples’ practices and urban rhythms.
• The performance of walls in the urban space: who are the actors, who is addressed, what justifies their presence?
• Shifting between presence and absence: what is it that walls make recognisable or alien
• Walls: accommodating differences through integration and segregation in the urban space
• Multiculturalism and citizenship in divided cities: is there commonality amidst the differences
• What are the challenges faced by current urban developments in terms of social cohesion in increasingly controlled and segmented urban environments

Though we expect modern historians to be interested in these topics, we would welcome papers from historians of earlier periods who might wish to offer perspectives on how walls, imagined and real, forged divisions in society.

ORGANIZERS:
Daniela Vicherat Mattar (Marie-Curie Fellow, School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of Edinburgh)
Prof. Richard Rodger (School of History, Classics & Archaeology, University of Edinburgh)

E-mail: d.vicheratmattar@ ed.ac.uk

Paper proposals have to be submitted on the conference website
(www.eauh2010.ugent.be/registration) between 1 October and 1 December 2009. Session organizers have to decide which papers they accept, and they should inform the speakers and the organizing committee about their decision (deadline: 1 February 2010). In April 2010 the final program will be available on the website.

Daniela Vicherat Mattar
Marie-Curie Fellow
School of History, Classics and Archaeology
University of Edinburgh
50 George Square
Edinburgh EH8 9JY

tel:+44 (0)131 650 9968
Email: d.vicheratmattar@ ed.ac.uk
Visit the website at http://www.eauh2010.ugent.be/sessions?sess_code=M17

Please quote 10 Academic Resources Daily in your application to this opportunity!


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