[Students-l] Fwd: [Air-L] CfP-Graduate Student Conference Theory / Novelty Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Michel Menou
michel.menou at orange.fr
Thu Apr 11 05:29:54 EDT 2013
> Date: Wed, 10 Apr 2013 06:44:00 +0000
> From: "Herold, David [APSS]"<david.herold at polyu.edu.hk>
> To:"air-l at listserv.aoir.org" <air-l at listserv.aoir.org>
> Subject: [Air-L] CfP-Graduate Student Conference
>
>
> CALL FOR PAPERS: GRADUATE STUDENT CONFERENCE
> Novelty / Theory, 26-28 September 2013, Hong Kong
> "Research without theory: Questioning ingrained practices and the pursuit of novelty"
>
> (please disseminate! || provisional deadline: 31 May 2013)
>
> Institution: The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (HKPU), Department of Applied Social Sciences (APSS), Hong Kong
>
> Speakers: Prof. Mark Hobart (SOAS, London) & Dr. Robert Hassan (University of Melbourne).
>
> e-mail:noveltheory at gmail.com<mailto:noveltheory at gmail.com>
> Twitter:http://twitter.com/noveltheory
> Website:http://noveltheory.tumblr.com
>
> The general theme of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University APSS Graduate School conference is "Research without theory: Questioning ingrained practices and the pursuit of novelty" (read more). We paired the two concepts of Novelty and Theory to challenge our sociological imagination and put our own research under scrutiny through some questions: why does it seem so easy and natural to talk about the contemporary in terms of novelty? Why do we think that the originality of our research proposal will be enough to grant it legitimacy? What are the risks of attuning our research to the current concerns of the moment, instead of setting our own theoretical agenda? How can we practice the new without theorizing it constantly? These (and more) questions are the core of a graduate students conference meant to encourage peer interaction, provide a chance for networking across disciplines and exchange insights in a conductive learning environment.
>
> All graduate students in Hong Kong, as well as other local and international graduate students are invited to submit their paper proposals to the conference. Our preference goes to paper presentations, but we also accept posters in case you cannot attend the conference or you prefer to lurk in the shadows of the lunch break.
>
> N/T2013 welcomes contributions from a wide range of disciplines willing to engage with the conference theme from any angle. Areas for possible contributions include, but are not restricted to:
>
> - Anthropology
> - Cultural studies
> - Humanities
> - Psychology
> - Social work
> - Sociology
>
> ...and beyond.
>
> If you are not sure about the way in which your ideas would fit the conference or you want to put some people together and organize a panel, just drop us a line.
>
> Submissions:
> All submissions should include a 300-word abstract (in English) and personal details (institutional affiliation, academic qualification, and email address).
>
> Unfortunately, we cannot offer any kind of funding for traveling, accommodation and other expenses, but we will do our best to suggest to you the cheapest options and organize some good meals.
>
> Join us!
>
> The N/T2013 team.
>
> noveltheory at gmail.com<mailto:noveltheory at gmail.com>
> http://twitter.com/noveltheory
> http://noveltheory.tumblr.com
More information about the Students-l
mailing list