Home | Conference | Program | Specials | Registration | Info
| Sponsorship
|
Contact |
|
|
Conference Theme The theme of the conference is “Nomadism and
Mobile Ways of Life in the Americas”. Considering recent global
developments (e.g. flows of refugees from zones of uprising and war in
Northern Africa and the Middle East, or the expulsion of Rom or of Irish
Travelers by various European governments), we think that a thorough
reflection on the historical and current situation in the Americas and the
Atlantic World is urgently necessary. “Nomads”,
“nomadism” and “mobile ways of life”, in its broadest
sense and taking into account the historical changes, will be the focus of
the conference. Thus, the keynote speakers and presenters will visualize
families, children, women, and men who belong to ethnic and religious
(minority) groups (Native Americans, African Americans, Romani, Jews, Arabs,
Afroindigenous), particular laborers and occupation groups (slaves, forced
laborers, gauchos/cowboys/vaque(i)ros/huasos/chinas, merchants,
smugglers, pirates, bandits, ship crews, fugitive slave catchers, slave
hunters, bandeirantes, scientists, explorers, diplomats, missionaries, gold
prospectors/pork knockers, prostitutes, soldiers), marginal groups (displaced
persons, vagabonds, squatters, landless) or to political outlaw groups
(guerilleros/combatants, rebels, maroons). How broadly the term nomadism has to
be defined with regard to the Americas and the Atlantic World – we
think about the fluent transition to displaced persons and migrants –
will be pointed out in the course of the conference as well the importance of
the Neolithic Revolution. Further core themes will include the analysis of
interactions between nomads and resident populations, of experiments of
social disciplining of (allegedly) nomadic autochthonous peoples that went as
far as intentional genocide, as well as nomadism as a consequence of colonial
power, slavery, violence and/or ecological catastrophes. This will ask for a
discussion about the motives and “voluntariness” or
“involuntariness” of mobile ways of life in an area of tension
between state and capitalism and shall bring new insights for the research on
nomadism. |
|
|
Sitemap |
KonaK Wien 2011
| >>>
Website KonaK Wien >>> | Website Credits, Disclaimer |