CALL FOR CONTRIBUTIONS TO:
RADICAL
HISTORIES/HISTORIES OF RADICALISM
A MAJOR CONFERENCE AND PUBLIC HISTORY
FESTIVAL
1-3 July 2016
Queen Mary University of London
This international event commemorates
twenty years since the death of the leftwing social historian Raphael Samuel
and forty years since the founding of History Workshop Journal. The
event will explore radical approaches to the past and histories of radical
ideas and action through lectures, panels, performances, screenings, workshops
and exhibitions.
The event is hosted by Queen Mary
University of London and organised by the Raphael Samuel History Centre (www.raphael-samuel.org.uk). It is intended to
engage a diverse audience, and to bring together practitioners of many
varieties of historical research, curatorship, writing and performance, from
both inside and outside the academy. Other venues and partners for the event
include Bishopsgate Institute, the London Metropolitan Archives and Tower
Hamlets Local Studies Library.
The event will open on the evening of
Friday 1st July [NB 2016] with a plenary session ‘Radical history then
and now’ involving radical historians, historians of radical movements and
movement activists, past and present. It will close with a panel discussion on
‘Raphael Samuel and his Legacies’. In between these plenary sessions, there
will be papers, film screenings, workshops, meetings and performances, all
exploring a wide range of themes and ideas in radical history. We have grouped
these themes as follows:
A. Radical movements:
History of radical movements and
organisations; parties; left-wing activism; working-class radicalisms; national
liberation struggles; popular mobilisations, past and present.
B. Diversity, difference and beyond:
Histories of feminism, gender and
sexuality; histories and activism of race and ethnicity; disability politics.
C. Local and global histories:
Radical London; migration/movement of
peoples; empire/post-colonial histories; globalisation; internationalism in a
global age.
D. Culture, art and environment:
Heritage and public history; radical
arts; environmental activism; housing politics.
E. History, policy, and the idea of
politics:
Europe; government; elites; the move
to the right; austerity; neo-liberalism; the politics of the academy
How to contribute:
Contributions that reflect on any
of these themes in relation to any period of history are
invited from academic and non-academic historians, and from those working or
practising in the arts, education, heritage and culture, as well as activists
campaigning in any of these areas.
The themes are indicative only, and
we will consider proposals that fall outside them so long as these relate to
the overall conference theme. We welcome offers of traditional academic papers
but would particularly like to encourage proposals for other session formats
likely to engage a varied audience, for example panel discussions, interactive
hands-on workshops (for example, around primary source materials),
photo-essays, exhibitions and performances. Contributions that focus on any
period of history are welcome, as are contributions that offer reflections on
methodologies (whether of the historian or the activist).
Please send a 250 - 500 word proposal, including a description of the
format and content of the proposed paper, session, workshop, meeting,
screenings, or performance. Include an abstract if appropriate, and the names
of any other speakers or participants. AT THE TOP OF YOUR PROPOSAL
PLEASE INDICATE THE CONFERENCE STRAND (A –E above) TO WHICH YOU THINK YOUR
PROPOSAL RELATES MOST CLOSELY.
Please submit your proposal to Katy
Pettit, Raphael Samuel History Centre administrator (k.pettit@uel.ac.uk) by Monday September 14th.
Proposers will be notified by November 30th.
***
About the Raphael Samuel History
Centre (RSHC)
Originally founded by the historian
Raphael Samuel at the University of East London in 1996 as the Centre for East
London History, and renamed after him in 2008, the Raphael Samuel History
Centre has since expanded into a partnership between UEL, Birkbeck College
University of London, Queen Mary University of London and Bishopsgate Institute
in the City of London.
An extensive range of events,
projects and research activities operates under our umbrella as we seek to
stimulate debate about the continuing force of the past in the present. Our
dynamic and engaged approach to history goes beyond the limits of the academy
to include people of all ages and backgrounds.
The Centre is recognised nationally
and internationally as the hub for intelligent debate that links history to
present-day concerns and crosses boundaries between academic and public/popular
history. We aim to put history in conversation both with other disciplines, and
with contemporary activism and politics. In the spirit of Raphael Samuel and more
broadly of the History Workshop movement, we are committed to a democratic,
non-elitist and inclusive approach to history. We aim to support, nurture and
encourage both new-career academic historians and those working in history
outside academia. We provide a forum for debate about the place of history in
public life, in schools, heritage organizations and the media. We enter
into partnership with other organizations – large and small – in order to
stimulate interest in and discussion of history.
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