Archive for the ‘CAAS Conference’ Category

CAAS 2010 – Registration and Hotel Booking Available

Tuesday, August 24th, 2010

Online conference registration and hotel booking are both now avaiable for CAAS 2010, Health/Care/Nation, in Windsor Ontario, Oct. 14-17, 2010.   Find both at the conference website, http://web2.uwindsor.ca/caas/conference/

CAAS 2010 – Hotel Information

Thursday, August 19th, 2010

Hotel registration information for the 2010 CAAS conference in Windsor is now posted on the conference website.  Hope to see you all there–and hopefully we will again find some guest and/or regular CAAS bloggers for the event–and maybe to help us update this blog more regularly afterwards? Stay tuned!

CAAS 2010: Health/Care/Nation; Deadline 31 May 2010

Sunday, May 16th, 2010

New deadline: May 31, 2010

*le français suit*

Please share this with your colleagues. Graduate students are especially encouraged to submit.

Conference CALL FOR PAPERS: Health/Care/Nation
Sponsored by the Canadian Association for American Studies and the University of Windsor

14-17 October 2010 http://uwindsor.ca/caas2010
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Weekend CFP Blogging, 25 April 2010

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

After a brief hiatus, our CFP blog is back.  First up, remember that the deadline for the 2010 CAAS-sponsored conference, “Health/Care/Nation” has been extended.  You can see more details here: http://uwindsor.ca/caas2010/call-for-papers.

Now, on to the other CFPs:

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Health/Care/Nation Deadline Extended!

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

A quick post to say that the deadline for abstracts for “Health/Care/Nation” has been extended to April 28th!  See the CFP here: http://uwindsor.ca/caas2010/call-for-papers.

For the Canadians out there, you know how important it is for our conference organizers to be able to submit as full a program as possible in our SSHRC conference-grant proposal: getting one of these grants allows us to offer grad student funding for the conference, among other things.  So, if you’ve been meaning to submit, but end of term has been getting in the way, now’s the time to fight back, and write that proposal!  :-)   –Jason

Health/Care/Nation Conference Site Launched! And write your proposals!

Sunday, April 4th, 2010

Hi all,

I’m pre-empting our regular weekend CFP blogging to announce that the conference website for Health/Care/Nation is now live, and to remind you that the deadline for proposals is April 10th.  Make sure to submit!

Weekend CFP Blogging, 28 February 2010

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

At the end of the Vancouver Olympics, and the end of my February Break, I bring you this week’s CFPs.  (Note especially the one at the top!  Don’t forget to submit your abstracts!)

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CAAS CFP: Health/Care/Nation Conference (Deadline 10 April 2010)

Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

CALL FOR PAPERS

Health/Care/Nation

Sponsored by the Canadian Association for American Studies and the University of Windsor

Windsor, Ontario 14-17 October 2010

During 2009 fears of “death panels” clashed with calls for universal coverage, as President Barack Obama encountered an increasingly heated debate about health-care reform. In this moment the very definitions of the terms health and care and their relations to concepts of the nation are taking on new significance in American political and cultural life. For some vocal Americans, the deeply held values of self-reliance and suspicion of government control are bound up with the “system” (be it the health-care system, or more general national, economic, social, and/or cultural systems), while at the same time a majority wants the government to guarantee health insurance for all in a Medicare-like program. A different provision for health-care invokes various and contradictory national and personal self-definitions and political battles. Body scanning, pandemic planning, the criminalization of abortion, and the proposal that all citizens must have health insurance are just a few examples of sites where these new definitions and struggles are engaged. What becomes apparent, then, are the complicated layers and contradictions in political and cultural debates. This conference, sponsored by the Canadian Association for American Studies and the University of Windsor, aims to explore the topics of U.S. health, care, and nation, together or separately, in order to illuminate and clarify the cultural contradictions and historical, cultural, and philosophical roots of these issues. We particularly encourage interdisciplinary panels that address the questions from different intellectual angles–history, literature, film and media studies, gender and sexuality studies, political science, sociology, philosophy, or the arts. Topics could include, but are not limited to:

The American political system and the problem of health care reform
Representations of health (widely defined)
Representations of health-care
Representations of disability
Biopolitics, surveillance, and/or socialist medicine
The philosophy and/or history of American “health”
The history of earlier American proposals for national health insurance
Health and gender
The philosophy and/or history of stem cell research
The philosophy and/or history of abortion and women’s medicine
Feminist health care activism
“Caring” and the nation
Nationalism vs. nationalizing
The American body politic
The business of selling health
Pandemics and other fears
The Hollywood Image: Anorexia/Obesity/Plastic

This is only a partial list–topics from all areas of American Studies will be considered. We invite panel or individual proposals from faculty and independent scholars and particularly welcome graduate student proposals. A brief CV for each participant and an abstract of 250 words or less for each paper, with an additional paragraph of 200 words to describe panels, should be sent electronically by 10 April to:

caas@uwindsor.ca

Christina Simmons, CAAS Conference Committee
Department of History
University of Windsor
401 Sunset Ave.
Windsor, ON   N9B 3P4

Weekend CFP Blogging, 05 February 2010

Friday, February 5th, 2010

If you’ve been keeping an eye on the CAAS homepage, you’ll see that the topic for the 2010 CASS-sponsored conference at the University of Windsor has been set: “Health/Care/Nation,” which will build nicely on the panel “Healing America,” being co-sponsored by CAAS at this year’s Association of Canadian College and University Teachers of English (ACCUTE) conference.

The dates for the 2010 conference are being settled on as we speak, and once that’s done, we’ll have our CFP to post.  Stay tuned!

In the meantime, our weekly CFP list:

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CAAS 2009, Pictures

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Hi all,

Jason here, with my concluding post about the conference, and a couple of pictures. As you can tell from Chris and Maureen’s posts (here and here), “States of Emergency” was a thought-provoking and exciting conference. Thanks are definitely due to Bryce Traister, the organizer, for his tremendous efforts (and success!) in putting together such a terrific conference. Following Bryce’s own lead, I also want to pass on CAAS’s thanks to Christine Wall, the Admin Assistant for the Centre for American Studies at the University of Western Ontario: Christine put a lot of work into the conference for us, and we are very grateful for everything!

We also would like to thank various organizations for their support: at Western, the Centre itself, as well as the VP Research, the Deans of Social Sciences, Information and Media Studies, Arts and Humanities and Law, and the Chairs of English and History. We would also like to thank the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and the US Consulate General, Public Affairs Section, in Toronto.

And, finally, thanks to my fellow bloggers, Maureen Mahoney and Chris Lockett for offering their time and intellectual energy to this effort! Thanks!

In closing, I’d like to remind everyone that we can continue the conversations started in London, and begin some new ones, at next year’s conference in Windsor. Keep an eye on this website for updates! Our regular cfp blog will return soon. –Jason

Pictures:

Our intrepid executive, at the beginning of the convention.

Our intrepid executive, at the beginning of the convention.


The Saturday evening banquet

The Saturday evening banquet