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Queer (Second) Cities

August 30-31, 2023 | Online

On August 30 and 31, 2023, JProf. Dr. Maria Sulimma is co-organizing the online conference Queer (Second) Cities together with Dr. Lena Mattheis from the University of Surrey.

The molly houses of London, the lesbian salons of Paris, the queer club scene of Berlin: LGBTQIA2S+ spaces are frequently considered urban and Western by default. Queer community in physical space is therefore often mapped onto a very limited number of metropolises, pushing rural queerness, the global South, queer periphery and queer second cities to the margins. Jack Halberstam’s critique of metronormativity (In a Queer Time and Place, 2005) as “the conflation of ‘urban’ and ‘visible’ in many normalizing narratives of gay/lesbian subjectivities” (36) can thus be further specified as referring to particular kinds of urban spaces and excluding others. In this international and interdisciplinary conference, contributors share their research on queer spaces outside of or on the margins of the metropolis, the communities that build and use these spaces, the infrastructures and practices they employ to do so, the cultures that shape queer second cities, and the ways in which all of the above are portrayed in literature, audiovisual media, the news, visual arts and any other media.

 

Confirmed Keynote Speakers:
Davy Knittle (University of Delaware) and Jas M. Morgan (Toronto Metropolitan University)

 

To receive the Zoom access for the conference, please register: . The conference program will be made available on the conference website: https://queersecondcities.wordpress.com/.

 

References:
Ameel, Lieven; Jason Finch and Markku Salmela. Literary Second Cities. Palgrave Macmillan, 2017.

Beauvoir, Simone de. The Second Sex. Vintage Classics, 2015.

Butler, Judith. Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. Routledge, 1990.

Halberstam, Jack. In a Queer Time and Place: Transgender Bodies, Subcultural Lives. NYU Press, 2005.

Quintana-Vallejo, Ricardo. “Mapping Queer Diasporas in Literary Second Cities: Benjamín Alire
Sáenz, Gabby Rivera, and Ocean Vuong.” Literary Geographies 7.2 (2021): 275-291.


Symposium: Echoes of Empire

July 13, 2023 | University of Freiburg

Echoes of empire resound in present-day politics, social orders, languages and cultures. On July 13, there will be the symposium Echoes of Empire, which is part of the DFG Research Training Group 2571 Empires: Dynamic Change, Temporality and Post-Imperial Orders and organized by Prof. Dr. Barbara Korte. This symposium offers perspectives on the topic from historical, linguistic and cultural studies.

It takes place at the Max-Kade-Auditorium 1, Bertoldstr. 17. 

14:00-14:05 Introduction Barbara KORTE
14:05-14:45 Rethinking the Coloniser after the End of Empire: The Impact of Decolonisation in the Metropoles Berny SÈBE
14:45-15:25 Reading Opposition to Empire in Africa and the Black Diaspora: Fanon, Aimé Césaire and Chinua Achebe Onookome OKOME
15:25-15:45 Coffee Break
15:45-16:15 A Global Lingua Franca in a Postcolonial World: World English Paradoxes in the 21st Century Christian MAIR
16:15-16:45 The British Empire in Contemporary British Popular Culture Barbara KORTE
/ Sophie BANTLE
16:45-17:00 Final Discussion
17:00-18:00 Recpetion

 

Please find the flyer with additional information here.


EUCOR 2023 Annual English Trinational MA and PhD Conference

April 21-22, 2023 | Freiburg University

The English Department is happy to host this year's EUCOR Annual English Trinational MA and PhD Conference with participation of the universities of Basel, Karlsruhe, Mulhouse, and Strasbourg! This year, students and doctoral candidates will again have the opportunity to present their research to a larger audience in a conference setting and discuss the topics with their colleagues from the respective departments.

 

Conference program:

FRIDAY, APRIL 21

10:00-10:30 Welcome
HS 3219 (KG III)
10:30-12:30 Panel 1: Gothic Narratives and Reflections of Death
Chair: Anne Bandry (U. of Strasbourg)
HS 3219 (KG III)
  • Sarah MARANO: "Painting and Spiritualism: The Examples of Adelaide Claxton (1841-1927) and Serafino Macchiati (1861-1916)", University of Upper Alsace
  • Daniel ORTIZ: "Lost in the Mud and Almost in Love with it: the Question of Poe's Metaphysics", University of Basel
  • Almir HODO: "Lovecraft and the Genestealer: A Cult Unfettered", University of Basel
  • Melanie LÖW: "Hauntology in Alejandro Amenabar's The Others", University of Basel
12:30-14:00 Lunch
Mensa
14:00-15:30

Panel 2: Ecocriticism
Chair: Ina Habermann (U. of Basel)
HS 1199 (KG I)

Panel 3: Language Construction and Utilization
Chair: Kübra Aksay (U. of Freiburg)
HS 1132 (KG I)

  • Klara MACHATA: "Reconsidering Space,
    Place and the Planet in
    Contemporary Anglophone Literature", University of Freiburg
  • Anouk AERNI: "The Narrative Structure of
    War: Reading James
    Webb's Fields of Fire Ecocritically", University of Basel
  • Chloé BOUR-LANG: "Barbara Kingsolver's Butterfly-Women: Animalsing Voices and Turning Wraith in Prodigal Summer and
    Flight Behavior", University of Strasbourg
  • Bella DALLY-STEELE: "Child Gender Criminals: Changes in Punishment for Nonconformity (USA)", University of Strasbourg
  • Lucie LOGEL: "Euphemistic Talk in Death-Related Registers: Obituaries and Epitaphs from 1905 to 1950 and 2010-2021", University of Strasbourg
  • Mareike HUBER: “Invented Languages in Tolkien’s Novels”, University of Freiburg
15:30-15:50 Coffee Break
In front of HS 1199 (KG I)
15:50-17:20

Panel 4: Songs in Memory and Popular Culture
Chair: Jennifer Howard (U. of Freiburg)
HS 1199 (KG I)

Panel 5: Early Modern England
Chair: Rémi Vuillemin (U. of Strasbourg)
HS 1132 (KG I)

  • Rachel MOORTHY: “Songs of Paradise: The Polyrhythm of Rememory”, University of Basel
  • Flavie LEGRAIN: “Feminism and Femininity in American Popular Music: Examining
    Beyonce`s ‘Run the World (Girls)’ as a Creative
    Work of Black Feminist Thought”, University of Strasbourg
  • Arman MARTIROSYAN: “From Eurovision to the American Song Contest: Mapping the European Vision of ‘Unity in Diversity’ onto America”, University of Strasbourg
  • Alix DESNAIN: "Heritage and Rupture: The Arthurian Legend in Early Modern England", University of Strasbourg
  • Sebastian STRAßBURG: "Representation of Consciousness in Sydney's Arcadia", University of Freiburg
  • Inès ETTAOUI: "Soothing the Soul and the Heart: The Role of Motifs in the Understanding of Francis Quarles's Emblemes (1635), University of Strasbourg
19:00 Dinner
Caritas, Wintererstraße

SATURDAY, APRIL 22

08:30-09:00 Arrival
In front of HS 1199 (KG I)
09:00-10:30 Panel 6: Victorian Women
Chair: Monika Fludernik (U. of Freiburg)
HS 1199 (KG I)
Panel 7: Religion, Spirituality, Christianity
Chair: Philipp Schweighauser (U. of Basel)
HS 1132 (KG I)
  • Victoire PERDREAU: "Aestheticizing Hysterical Violence: Lewis Caroll and Jean-Martin Charcot", University of Upper Alsace
  • Isabel JIMENEZ: "Made of Fire: A Study of Fire in Jane Eyre", University of Basel
  • Camille OERTEL: " The Child's Peculiar Place in the World as Seen Through the Eyes of the Adult Woman in Alice Meynell's Poetry", University of Strasbourg
  • Salomé ARCHIS: "Unrestricted Spaces?
    The Articulation of
    Different Spatial Dimensions
    in
    The Book of Margery Kempe",
    University of Strasbourg
  • Ece ERGIN: "'What Would Sister Think?': The Heterogeneity and Hybridity of Indigenous
    Spiritual Identity in Michelle Good's
    Five Little Indians", University of Freiburg
  • Jennifer HOWARD: "'To be on God's Side': in a Divided America: Islam Represented as
    American Civil Religion in Disney
    Plus's Ms.
    Marvel", University of Freiburg
10:30-10:50 Coffee Break
In front of HS 1199 (KG I)
10:50-11:50 Panel 8: (Neo-)Victorian TV Adaptations
and Photography

Chair: Sämi Ludwig (U. of Upper Alsace)
HS 1199 (KG I)
Panel 9: Language Acquisition
Chair: tba
HS 1132 (KG I)
  • Sophie BANTLE: "Corruption, Compassion, and Counter-Narrative in the Neo-Victorian Detective Series Ripper Street", University of Freiburg
  • Rasha ALSHBLI: "William Lake Price (1810-1896) and His Artistic Photography", University of Upper Alsace
  • Somia LARIT: "Gender Differences in
    Phonological Acquisition
    of English as a
    Foreign Language", University of Upper Alsace
  • Nadja WICHER: "Promotion of Physically Active Learning in the English Language Classroom", University of Freiburg
11:50-12:10 Coffee Break
In front of HS 1199 (KG I)
12:10-13:10 Panel 10: Thatcher’s Britain
Chair: Wolfgang Hochbruck (U. of Freiburg)
HS 1199 (KG I)
Panel 11: Disney
Chair: Ece Ergin (U. of Freiburg)
HS 1132 (KG I)
  • Sarah ALBIENTZ: "'No Gods, No Masters': The Transformation of the Anarchist Movement in the 1980's", University of Upper Alsace
  • Sofiane AMRAR: "The 1984-1985 Miner's Strike in Films", University of Upper Alsace
  • Sarah BERAZI: "Satan in Disguise? - An Analysis of Disney's 'Evil Queen' from the 1937 Version of Snow White and the Seven
    Dwarfs", University of Upper Alsace
  • Tahmineh HOSSEINZADEHKHABIR:
    "'Aren't You Tired of
    Living on the Margins?': 'False Consciousness' and 'Class Consciousness' in the Disney Movie The
    Princess and The Frog
    (2009)", University of Upper Alsace

13:10

Closing Remarks & WIne
In front of HS 1199 (KG I)

PDF-Version

To attend the conference, please register here.


CaP Banner

Culture at Play: Avatars, Players, and Others

March 10-11, 2023 | Zoom

Scholarly work on video games has often located a major part of the player experiences within the exploration of gameworlds. This was one of the main frameworks under which the last year’s conference, Culture at Play: Spaces - Colours - Stories, offered a platform for an interdisciplinary discussion of video games.

In this follow-up, Culture at Play: Avatars, Players, and Others, we aim to focus on the characters as interlocutors of these much-investigated environments by shifting the debate on the relationships between players and the characters they take the roles of, as well as those they encounter during play.

 

Keynote speakers: 

Richard Bartle (University of Essex), Lena Falkenhagen (UE Hamburg), Sarah Stang (Brock University)

 

Conference program:

FRIDAY, MARCH 10

10:00-11:00 Keynote
Richard Bartle (University of Essex)
“Anti-Social Consequences of Social Play”
Panel 1: Limbo is Other People - Game Design and Tools for Affect and Immersion
Chair: Undine Remmes
11:00-11:20  Angelina Skuratova (Paderborn University)
“Re-living the Eternal Present: An Exploration of (Narrative) Loops in Video Games”
11:20-11:40 Zlatko Bukač and Emilia Musap (University of Zadar)
“Fear and Anxiety in Louisiana: Affects and Immersion in Resident Evil 7: Biohazard”
11:40-12:00 Alesha Serada (University of Vaasa)
“Not Actual Gameplay: Affective Non-Playable Characters in Match-3 Game
Advertising”
12:00-12:30 Panel Discussion
12:30-13:30 Lunch Break
Panel 2: Cistemic Spectrum - Topics of Gender and Fluidity
Chair: Maria Sulimma
13:30-13:50 Anja Gödl (University of Innsbruck)
“A Female Rabbit Called Bonbon and a Male Lion Called Elvis: Gender Theoretical
Analysis of the Naming of Characters in Animal Crossing New Horizons”
13:50-14:10 Rebecca Käpernick (University of Oldenburg)
“Girls who Run the (End of the) World - Female Protagonists and Side-Kicks in
Post-Apocalyptic Video Games”
14:10-14:30 Jasmin Bieber (University of Konstanz)
“Who is Controlling the Heart?”: Non-Binary Identities and Troubled Player Agency in
Deltarune”
14:30-15:00 Panel Discussion
15:00-15:30 Coffee Break
15:30-16:30 Keynote
Sarah Stang (Brock University)
“Identity, Embodiment, and Monstrosity: Playing as the Nonhuman Other”
16:30 - 17:00 Coffee Break
Panel 3: The Borderlands - Fleeing (into) Society
Chair: Jennifer Howard
17:00.17:20 Marie Zarda (Philipps-University Marburg)
“‘There Was No Country For People Like Me!’: Ideologies and Identities of Bioshock’s
Rapture”
 
17:20-17:40
Carolin Becklas (University of Oldenburg)
“Playing ‘Climate Refugees’ in Frostpunk”
17:40-18:00 Marko Jevtic (University of Konstanz)
“Between Interactivity and Activism: Identity Tourism and the 'Playful Translations' of
(Radical) Resistance”
18:00-18:30 Panel Discussion
19:00-21:00 Two Simultaneous Sessions
Workshop 1: Creating Desired Characters. Host: Florian Schäfer
Workshop 2: Let’s Play Multiplayer ‘Party’ Games. Host: Janna Kaiser

SATURDAY, MARCH 11

10:00-11:00 Keynote
Lena Falkenhagen (UE Hamburg)
“‘Who am I?’ Player-collaboration in Digital Games”
Panel 4: “Despite everything, it’s still you.” - Tropes of Character Development
Chair: Andreas Rauscher
11:00-11:20 Fiona Schönberg (Mainz University)
“‘This is my Story, and it will go the way I want it!’”
11:20-11:40 Ted Richthofen (University of Bonn)
“Niko Bellic: ‘The Gangster as Tragic Hero,’ Criminal Embodiment and Capitalist
Escapism in Grand Theft Auto IV”
11:40-12:00 Carmel Anne Abela (Nagoya University)
“Rethinking the Player Character as an Outsider: a Different Perspective on the
Playing Experience and Its Implications”
12:00-12:30 Panel Discussion
12:30-13:30 Lunch Break
Panel 5: Bravely Default - Breaking From or Adhering To Normativity
Chair: Ece Ergin
13:30-13:50 Agata Waszkiewicz and Robin Longobardi Zingarelli(University of Lublin/Institute of
Digital Games, Malta)
“Emergence of Non-Binary Identities in Video Games: a Discourse Analysis
Approach”
13:50-14:10 Xuan Truong (University of Freiburg)
“The Feminine Alternate: An Examination of ‘Default’ Avatar Genders in Role Playing
Video Games”
14:10-14:30 Aska Mayer (Aalto University)
“Transmutation and Mimicry. Shapeshifting Avatars as Spatial Reaction and Modes
of Alienation”
14:30-15:00 Panel Discussion
15:00-15:30 Coffee Break
15:30-16:30 Kübra Aksay, Andreas Rauscher, Undine Remmes (University of Freiburg)
“Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Virtual Spaces”:
Poster presentation followed by roundtable discussion
16:30 - 17:00 Coffee Break
Panel 6: Choose your fighter! - Representation and Perspectives as Design-Tools
Chair: Sarah Busch
17:00-17:20 Tobias Weißer (PH Ludwigsburg)
“Nikolay Dybowski's Pathologic as a Hypertextual Contemplation on Modernity and
Progress”
17:20-17:40 Nour Habib (University of Freiburg)
“Gender and Race Representation in Tekken”
17:40-18:00 Panel Discussion

19:00-21:00

Conference Dinner (On-Site, in Freiburg)

PDF-Version

 

To register as an audience member please send an email to  indicating your name and institution.

 

Presentation abstracts:

Please find the PDF-Version of the presentation abstracts here.

 

About the conference:

Culture at Play: Avatars, Players, and Others is an international conference organized by the English Department at the University of Freiburg, and a follow-up to last year’s Culture at Play: Spaces – Colours – Stories in Digital Games. The conference series aims to open up a space that allows for sophisticated, critical analyses of video games and the cultural field that has emerged around them using an interdisciplinary approach that includes cultural, literary, and media studies.

The conference will take place on March 10 - 11, 2023 via Zoom.

Organizing Committee: Kübra Aksay, Janna Kaiser, Florian Schäfer

 

Previous iterations:

The conference proceedings of Culture at Play: Spaces – Colours – Stories in Digital Games were compiled by Sofia Guimarães, Dion Weidenhammer and Larissa Rell and published in Paidia - Zeitschrift für Computerspielforschung on April 27, 2022. You can access the proceedings (in German) here.


The Long Night of Anglicists

Long Night of AnglicistsNovember 25, 4-10 pm | Online

On the 25th of November, the Long Night of Anglicists will take place! Brace yourselves for an evening full of lectures, workshops, and presentations prepared by English teachers from all over Poland. This is a unique event and the main goal is to show the thoughts and scientific potential of English studies in Poland, as well as to unravel myth that English studies is only about language learning.

There will be plenty of online events to attend and participation is free for everyone. To find out more about the specific lectures, workshops, and presentations, please visit the event's website.


Connectivity and its Other | International Conference

July 2, 2022

connectivity-poster_updated.png

The ubiquity of digital connectivity and the subsequent diminishing of human connection have become truths of our time. This conference starts with the assumption that digital overload takes a toll on people’s ability to connect meaningfully with themselves or with others. As many studies have shown hyperconnectivity can lead to self-centered thinking, narrow-mindedness, and a lack of empathy. The attendant mindset can and often does propel contemptuous forms of social interaction.

While the downsides and risks of hyperconnectivity are well known and widely lamented, contemporary media criticism explores moments of “digital disentanglement,” i.e. users' deliberate strategies to disconnect. This would constitute a resistance or alternative to hyperconnectivity. The “other” of hyperconnectivity then does not only refer to forms of othering (e.g. cyberhate and populist vitriol), which drive polarization and undermine democratic and civil culture.

In this conference we will examine already existent counter-strategies such as digital minimalism, digital self-defense and the digital detox movement as well as the booming mindfulness movement and the emerging academic field of critical digital literacy that train (mental) skills to curtail the harmful effects of hyperconnectivity.

Organized by Prof. Dr. Sieglinde Lemke

 

 


 

From Racial Polarization to Black Liberation | Symposium

February 3, 2021 | Online

Polarization/Liberation SymposiumProf. Dr. Sieglinde Lemke and Luvena Kopp, M.A. are the organizers of a symposium which looks into the current Black movement, its repercussions and its potential to further social transformation. Guest speakers will be Priscilla Layne, Ph.D. (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill), Dr. Nicole Hirschfelder (University of Tübingen), and Courtney Moffett-Bateau, M.A. (University of Bremen).

Black Lives Matter has become the rallying cry of the largest protest movement in U.S. history. As people from various nations and races have joined its protests, the movement has become an indispensable force of social change. This comes at a time of extreme polarization, propelled by increasing political partisanship, wherein rising levels of violence, animosity, and contempt towards members of the other group exacerbate divisions in U.S. society. The recent upsurge of Black Lives Matter, in an era of COVID-19, exposes long-standing racial as well as economic polarization. Expediting the structures of neoliberal capitalism, the pandemic reinforces the precarity of the many while increasing profits for the few. As the pandemic converges with a tradition of racist police brutality, Black lives are the main victims of a dual crisis.

The resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement links the struggle for Black liberation to a broader struggle for systemic change. "Black liberation," Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor reminds us in From #BlackLivesMatter to Black Liberation, "is bound up with the project of human liberation and social transformation."


 

Law and Literature from a Narratological Perspective | International Conference

May 6 – 8, 2021 | Online

Organized by Prof. Dr. Monika Fludernik and Prof. Dr. Frank L. Schäfer. A program from the conference can be found here.


26th EARS Meeting (English and American Rhenish Scholars)

December 3, 2021 | Université Haute-Alsace Mulhouse
Following the meeting, a festive dinner at the Auberge du Zoo was offered by the UHA


Culture at Play: Spaces – Colours – Stories in Digital Games

March 4 – 5, 2022 | Online

Over the last few decades, video games have left their marginal position in culture and turned into a central experience that holds a permanent place in the lives of many people.

At the same time, they have also grown ever more sophisticated in content as well as audio-visual quality.

As a result, it is not only increasingly important to give them the serious consideration they deserve, but also that this happens in a manner that can do justice to their unique, multimedia mode of expression.

The conference is aiming to open up a space that allows for a sophisticated analysis of video games and the cultural field that has emerged around them using an interdisciplinary approach that includes, cultural, literary, and media studies.

You can find the program for the event, which will be continuously updated, here.