Call for Applications

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The Bavarian American Academy in Munich
12th International Summer Academy

FOR DOCTORAL STUDENTS AND JUNIOR FACULTY IN AMERICAN STUDIES ON

“Cultural Narratives of the State
in a Comparative Perspective”

JUNE 5 – 13, 2023, LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY

Directors: Alan Nadel (U of Kentucky), Heike Paul (FAU)
Co-Director: Martha Schoolman (Florida International U, Miami)
Coordinator: Emily Naser-Hall (U of Kentucky)

Theme

A “cultural narrative” is a category defined not by its structure but by its function, which is to locate time; it is grounded in the premise that, in this sense, the functions of a narrative are historically specific and culturally delimited; and it is presumed that historically specific conditions render specific narratives cogent and others absurd, such that, at any given moment, at any given social site (the family, the community, the state, the nation), some cogent narratives are tacitly accepted as universally true and others as viable possibilities. The map of the absurd, the tacitly true, and the viably cogent, therefore, comprises any specific culture or subculture, and thus that culture’s imaginative works reflect its cogent narratives and also, through acts of iteration and reinforcement, (re)produce that culture.

In that context, we wish to stage an international, comparative and multidisciplinary conversation about the historical and contemporary status of the state as a formation that is variously political and cultural, coercive and democratic, radically stable and uniquely (or perpetually) under attack. The modern nation-state is a ubiquitous form of political organization in the West, usually including representative democracy with a constitutional government that implements the separation of powers into a system of checks and balances. It includes – bound to its territory – a claim to sovereignty and to a legitimate monopoly on violence. What is more, the Western nation-state operates in a liberal market economy. Symbolically, any state or political system relies on affirming its legitimacy by way of foundational documents (“national archive”) and abstract speech acts (“we, the people”), iconic visualizations of power (the oval office, the capitol dome), and the reiteration of performative rituals and cultural practices (national holidays, inauguration ceremonies). The state and its institutions can become mythologized in state narratives (e.g., the president and the presidency, the supreme court); their workings can be rendered invisible or may operate in concealed and hidden ways, such as their thematic iteration in aspects of material and popular culture, and they can be pitted against each other in struggles for power. In times of crisis, however, these state narratives are summoned, re-affirmed, questioned, or transformed depending on their capacity to provide stability and legitimacy.

This year’s theme speaks to both academic debates and pressing political struggles on both sides of the Atlantic, at a time in which the state and its institutions, as well as governmentality, as such, seem to be under particular pressure. Given the traditional focus within American Studies on the legitimizing and unifying roles of state narratives, our animating questions will concern how we must reorient our thinking and revise our archives in response, for example, to the willful incoherence typified by recent leaders in an array of liberal democracies, including Brazil, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United States, or the implications of state violence and climate crisis. Possible approaches and research foci may include: the critical discourse entailed  in  calls for a strong or a lean state; the privileging of the “ national security state” over value of civil liberties for the sake; the countervailing call for the state to protect social interests or the habitability of planet by intervening against market the forces; the role of narrative in working out questions of belonging, statelessness, and statehood/citizenship; the limits of statecraft in the age of globalization; the narrative contours of populist movements on both sides of the Atlantic and their production of  “retrotopian” state narratives glorifying bygone times; and the resurgence of dystopian literature as a cultural touchstone.

Format

The program of the academy entails keynote lectures by US and European speakers and work-in-progress presentations by doctoral students and junior faculty. All presentations are delivered in plenary sessions, with ample time for questions and discussion. The eight-day program will also include several cultural events related to the region.

Speakers

The keynote lecturers this year include: Rich Blint (New School for Social Research), Alexandra Ganser (University of Vienna, Austria), DaMaris Hill (University of Kentucky), Carol Mason (University of Kentucky), Alan Nadel (University of Kentucky), Diane Negra (UC Dublin), Heike Paul (FAU Erlangen-Nuremberg), Donald Pease (Dartmouth), Katja Sarkowsky (Augsburg University), Birgit Spengler (University of Wuppertal), Martha Schoolman (Florida International University), Hortense Spillers (Vanderbilt University, Emerita).

Cultural Activities

Activities in and around Lexington include an evening at a local blues bar, and tours of the thoroughbred horse farms, the Woodford bourbon distillery, and the Henry Clay Estate.

Tuition

The total registration fee of $550 (USD) includes:

1. full tuition, 2. eight nights in luxury University dorms rooms a short walk from the presentations, 3. all tour tickets and cultural events, transportation to the events, and three dinners.

Acceptance also includes up to 750 euro subsidy towards intercontinental transportation.

Application

Open to doctoral students and junior faculty. Applications should contain:

  • a 1-page letter of application
  • CV
  • a 2-page project description
  • one letter of recommendation

The application should be submitted electronically, by March 17, 2023, to:
baa.2023@uky.edu

THE PROGRAM IS GENEROUSLY FUNDED BY:
Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen Nuremberg, Germany
The German Research Foundation
The University of Kentucky Office of the Vice President for Research
The University of Kentucky School of Arts and Sciences
The William T. Bryan Endowed Chair