October 11-12, 2003 – Arif Dirlik: Lecture & Seminar

Lecture

Globalization and the Question of Culture 
Thursday, October 11
Oakes Mural Room
4:00 PM

 

Seminar
Re-thinking Colonialism: Globalization, Postcolonialism, and the Nation
Friday, October 12
10-12:00 pm
Oakes Mural Room

 

The seminar reading should be completed in advance. Copies of readings can be picked up at the Center for Cultural Studies, or can be mailed to a campus address on request (cult@hum.ucsc.edu). Please make email requests at least one week prior to the seminar.

Arif Dirlik is one of the most important critics writing at the nexus of globalization, postcolonial theory, historiography, Asia-Pacific Studies, and capital critique. He has published over fifteen books and numerous articles. His 1997 book The Postcolonial Aura: Third World Criticism in the Age of Global Capitalism (Westview), is a trenchant analysis and critique of postcolonial theory, and an assessment of its adequacy to the contemporary situation. After the Revolution: Waking to Global Capitalism (Wesleyan, 1994), posed a similar set of challenges to Marxist theory, calling for a new set of oppositional practices and modes of critique that respond to the situation of a newly hegemonic global capitalism and the demise of the socialist states. Other books include Places and Politics in the Age of Global Capital (ed. with Roxann Prazniak, Rowman and Littlefield, 2001), Postmodernity’s Histories: The Past as Legacy and Project (Rowman and Littlefield, 2000), What is in a Rim? Critical Perspectives on the Pacific Region Idea (Westview, 1993), and Anarchism in the Chinese Revolution (University of California, 1991). His works have been translated into Chinese, Japanese, Korean, French, Portuguese, and Turkish. Professor Dirlik’s seminar paper, forthcoming in Engin Isik et al., ed., Handbook of Historical Sociology (Sage), is a provocative intervention into debates about the place of colonialism in contemporary historical cultural studies.

May 17, 2001 – Arthur Groos: "'Like an Imprisoned Fly': Madama Butterfly between East and West"

Thursday, May 17 | Oakes Mural Room | 4:00 PM

 

Arthur Groos is Professor of German Studies, Medieval Studies, and Music at Cornell University, where he has taught since 1973. Co-editor of Reading Opera (1988) and co-author of Giacomo Puccini: La Bohème (1986), his other books include Romancing the Grail: Genre, Science, and Quest in Wolfram’s Parzival (1995),and numerous articles on medieval literature, Goethe, Schiller, and German and Italian opera. Works in progress include a monograph on orientalism and Madama Butterfly and the Cambridge Opera Handbook on Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde. He writes that his talk “is largely a decolonizing interpretation of Acts II-III of the opera, suggesting that Butterfly’s attempt to construct a western identity as Mrs. B. F. Pinkerton is doomed to failure because of western racial prejudices about the oriental other. It shows among other things that all those embarrassing moments in Act II are deliberate, and suggests through an analysis of Butterfly’s major numbers how the opera can be viewed as a tragedy of failed assimilation.”

 

May 12-13, 2001 – "The Twentieth Century as World History"

Saturday, May 12, 8:30 am-5:00 pm & Sunday, May 13, 8:30 am-12:00 pm
Stevenson Fireside Lounge

Participants include: Daniel Brower (History, UCD), David Chrisitan (History, SDSU), James Gelvin (History, UCLA) and Jose Moya (History, UCLA)

This event is one of two yearly research conferences sponsored by the World History Workshop, a UC Multicampus Research Group. The Workshop seeks to uncover modernity’s roots both as outcomes of long-term world historical processes and as the cumulative interaction of European and non-European elites and peoples. In doing so it also hopes to further the development of world history as an emerging research area both within the field of history as well as an arena of interdisciplinary inquiry at the intersection of the humanities and social sciences. It draws together faculty and resources from all eight UC campuses (Irvine, Berkeley, Davis, Los Angeles, Riverside, Santa Cruz, Santa Barbara and San Diego). The MRG is based at UC Irvine, and is headed by Kenneth Pomeranz. The steering committee consists of Edmund Burke, III (UCSC), Rebecca Emigh (UCLA), John Hall (UCD), Randy Head (UCR) and John Marino (UCSD).

May 11-12, 2001 – Tenth Annual Women of Color Film and Video Festival: Eclipse: Towards a Decolonizing Cinema

Friday & Saturday, May 11-12 | Kresge Town Hall

The festival provides an on-going venue for women of color to show their work, discuss current issues facing communities of color, and form collaborative projects. This year’s festival will honor filmmaker and director Cheryl Dunye. The festival will additionally feature works that document the international struggle against the violence of incarceration through political and cultural resistance in a postcolonial present.

For more information, please contact Katy Elliott, cult@hum.ucsc.edu; 459-4899

May 1/May 24, 2001 – Civilizational Thinking Seminar

Michael Shanks
(Classics and Cultural Anthropology, Stanford)

35 Moments in The Construction of an Archaeological Site. Or, the Impossibility of Archaeology

Tuesday, May 1 | Oakes Mural Room | 4:00 PM

Professor Shanks is an archaelogist who, in his own words, “taking the broadest view of the subject, works on what is left of the past.” From 1993-98 he was Head of Archaeology at the University of Wales, Lampeter and helped build there a department with a new interdisciplinary agenda. In seven books and other publications, the latest of which is Theater/Archaeology, forthcoming from Routledge-“the (re)articulation of ruin/trace as real-time event”-he has tried to contribute to a critique of anthropological archaeology which would radically revise it as a disciplinary and cultural field.

 

Stephen Caton
(Anthropology, Harvard University)

America–the Land Without History

Thursday, May 24 | Oakes Mural Room | 4:00 PM

Professor Caton is a Middle East specialist and anthropological linguist by training, but of late has become interested in writing a biography of one of his ancestors, a prominent lawyer and judge who lived in the midwest in the nineteenth-century United States. This paper examines his amateur scientific writings, along with a number of other, more professional pieces written about the same time by the noted anthropologist Lewis Henry Morgan and the celebrated historian Frederick Jackson Turner, and examines the way in which the categories of “science,” and particularly of “natural history,” were constructed at the time. It will be argued that the production of what was then called scientific knowledge is complexly related to issues of regionalism and civilization as discussed in this seminar.

The Civilizational Thinking project is supported by a grant from the Ford Foundation.

 

Spring 2001 Colloquium Series

Colloquium Series

In Spring 2001, the Center for Cultural Studies will continue to host a Wednesday colloquium series, which features current cultural studies work by campus faculty and visitors. The sessions are informal, normally consisting of a 30-40 minute presentation followed by discussion. We gather at noon, with presentations beginning at 12:15. Participants are encouraged to bring their own lunches; the Center will provide coffee, tea, and cookies. 

 

ScheduleALL COLLOQUIA ARE IN THE OAKES MURAL ROOMApril 4
Radhika Mongia
(Women’s Studies, UC Santa Cruz )
Rethinking State Sovereignty or, Colonial Genealogies of the Modern State 

April 11
Anjali Arondekar
(Women’s Studies, UC Santa Cruz)
The Story of an India-Rubber Dildo: Locations of Desiere in Colonial Pornography 

April 18
Frazer Ward
(Art History, Maryland Institute, College of Art)
Notes on Approaching Marina Abramovic’s Rhythm 

April 25
Caroline Streeter
(UC President’s Postdoctoral Fellow, Sociology and the Center for Cultural Studies, UC Santa Cruz)
“I’m thinking if that Oprah got her a gun…”: African American Celebrity and Popular Culture in Gayl Jones’s ‘Mosquito and The Healing'”

May 2 
John Dean
(American Literature and Cultural Studies, University of Versailles St. Quentin en Yvelines)
How Twentieth Century American Subcultures Have Contributed to the Nation’s Pantheon of Popular Heroes

May 9
Bettina Aptheker
Memoir, Memory, and the Collective (De)Construction of Women’s History

May 16
Bob White
(Anthropology, UC Santa Cruz )
Cuban ‘Rumba’ and Other Cosmopolitanisms in the Belgian Congo (1949-1999)

May 23
Christopher Breu
(English, Illinois State University)
Come Fly With Me: Frank Sinatra and the Short American Century 

 

Participants

Radhika Mongia is Assistant Professor of Women’s Studies, UCSC. She is currently working on a book-length project, titled Genealogies of Globalization: Migration, Colonialism, and the State. The project focuses on the emergence of state technologies for controlling international migration examining, in particular, how the distinction between ‘legal’ and’illegal’ migration is historically produced. “Race, Natonality, Mobility: A History of the Passport,” a portion of this research, appeared in Public Culture, in Public Culture in 1999.

Anjali Arondekar is Assistant Professor in Women’s Studies at UCSC, having recently arrived from Smith College where she was the Andrew W. Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellow (1999-2001). Her research interests include queer studies, Victorian studies, critical race studies and post-colonial theory. She has published variously in the Journal of Asian Studies,Symploke, Post-Modern Culture and The Village Voice. Her most recent article, “Lingering Pleasures, Perverted Texts,” is forthcoming in collection entitled Queer Texts/Colonial Texts(University of Minnesota Press, 2002). She is currently co-editing a collection, Queer Postcolonialities: Borders, Limits and Margins, with Professor Geeta Patel, and also working on a book manuscript titled A Perverse Empire: Victorian Sexuality and the Indian Colony.

Frazer Ward is Assistant Professor of Art History at the Maryland Institute, College of Art, and currently Visiting Assistant Professor of Art History at Stanford University. He is working on a project dealing with Vietnam-era performance art, examining the ethical implications of the ways in which publics constitute themselves around violence and its representations. He has recently written an essay surveying Vito Acconci’s career, an essay on Chris Burden’s Shoot for the journal October, and guest-edited an issue of the journal Documents on the topic of privacy.

Caroline Streeter is a UC President�s Postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Cultural Studies and the Department of Sociology at UC Santa Cruz. She received her Ph.D. in Ethnic Studies with a Designated Emphasis in Women, Gender and Sexuality from UC Berkeley in 2000. Her postdoctoral research investigates how cultural work by black women negotiates the complex terrain of consumption in mass commercial culture. Shehas been active in the area of mixed-race scholarship, and her areas of research interest include narratives of race mixing in African American literature, film, and visual art, along with the politicized emergence of mixed-race identities i the post-Civil Right era. She is published in The Multiracial Experience (Sage, 1996) and has an essay in the forthcoming New Faces in a Changing America: Multiracial Identity in the 21st Century.

John Dean is on the faculty of the University of Versailles St. Quentin en Yvelines, where he teaches American literature and cultural studies. He has held research positions at the University of Strasbourg and the Kennedy Institute for American Studies in Berlin. His publications include European Readings of American Popular Culture (1996) and Restless Wanderers: Shakespeare and the Pattern of Romance(1979), several volumes on the United States published in French, a large number of articles on French and English language science fiction, as well as poetry, fiction, scholarly articles, and journalism on a wide range of topics. While at the Center this spring, he will work on several projects, among them a book on the hero and heroine in American popular culture.

Bettina Aptheker is Professor and Chair of Women’s Studies. Her books include: The Morning BreaksThe Trial of Angela Davis, second edition, Cornell University Press, 1999; Tapestries of Life: Women’s Work, Women’s Consciousness and the Meaning of Daily Experience, University of Massachusetts Press, 1989; Woman’s Legacy: Essays on Race, Sex and Class in American History, University of Massachusetts Press, 1982. She is near completion of work on a memoir.

Bob White, Assistant Professor in Anthropology at UC Santa Cruz, specializes in popular culture and politics in francophone Africa. His primary research examines the production and meaning of popular dance music in Congo-Zaire (now Democratic Republic of the Congo), where he conducted fieldwork and worked as a musician in a local band from 1995-1996. He has published several articles on this subject: “Modernity’s Trickster: ‘Dipping’ and ‘Throwing’ in Congolese Popular Dance Music” (forthcoming in Research in African Literatures, special issue on performance), and “Soukouss or Sell-Out? Congolese Popular Dance Music on the World Market,” in Commodities and Globalization: Anthropological Perspectives, Angelique Haugerud, M. Priscilla Stone, and Peter D. Little (eds.), forthcoming.

Christopher Breu is an Assistant Professor of English at Illinois State University, where he teaches courses in twentieth-century American literature, popular culture, and critical theory. He is currently completing work on a book manuscript entitled Hard-Boiled Masculinities: Fantasizing Gender in American Literature and Popular Culture, 1920-45. In addition, he has published on a diverse array of subjects including Maryse Cond�’s _I, Tituba, Black Witch of Salem and contemporary techno and indie-rock. His current work on Frank Sinatra represents the beginning of a larger project on internal struggles over politics and culture in the United States and their relationship to the emergence of the U.S. as a global hegemon in the middle years of the twentieth century.

April 24, 2001 – Istvan Rev: "Hypnosis and the Hungarian Revolution"

Tuesday, April 24 | Oakes Mural Room | 4:00 PM

 

Istvan Rev is Professor of History and Political Science at Central European University, Budapest, where he is also the Academic Director of the Open Society Archive. He has been a visiting faculty member at the University of California, Berkeley on several occasions. Since the early 1980s Rev has published widely on the political cultural, and architectural history of Hungary and other Eastern bloc countries. Since the political transformations of 1989, he has emerged as one of the most highly regarded writers on issues of post-socialism, publishing on various dimensions of the transition-such as official and popular memory, state discourse and popular resistance, andthe status of socialist-era monuments-in journals such as Daedalus, Dissent, and Representations. His articles include . “The Advantages of being Atomized” (1987), “In Mendacio Veritas” (1991), and The Archeology of Resurrection (1991) . He is currently completing a book for Stanford University Press on retroactive justice.

 

April 19/May 4, 2001 – Visual and Performance Studies Speaker Series: Performing the Image

John Lechte (Senior Lecturer, Sociology, Macquarie University) 
The Time-Image and Seduction
Thursday, April 19 | Social Sciences II, Room 265 | 4:00PM

 

Professor Lechte has published numerous articles and books on Julia Kristeva, psychoanalysis and culture, and Australian history. His books include:  Fifty Key Contemporary Thinkers: From Semiotics to Postmodernism (1994); After the Revolution: On Kristeva (1998). Presently, he completing a book called On the Imaginary: Its Life and Death. His paper will examine the time image in light of Deleuze’s work.

Peggy Phelan (Performance Studies, Tisch School, New York University) 
The Photography of Francesca Woodman: Death and the Image One More Time
Friday, May 4 | Kresge 159 | 4:00PM

 

Professor Phelan works at the intersection of performance, visuality and gender. Her books include Unmarked: The Politics of Performance (1993) and Mourning Sex: Performing Public Memories (1996). She has co-edited two collections: Acting Out: Feminist Performances and The Ends of Performance(1998). Phelan is writing a book entitled:  Death in America: Ronald Reagan and Andy Warhol. She is currently a Visiting Professor at Stanford University.

 

April 12, 2001 – Mary E. John: "Is Nature: Culture as Culture: Politics? Transnational Feminisms and South Asian Predicaments"

Thursday, April 12 | Oakes Mural Room | 12:00 PM

 

This talk moves forward from the arguments of “discrepant dislocations”, first explored in John’s (1996) and draws on her current participation in feminist debates in India. The nature/culture problematic has been paradigmatic for western feminism. It has enabled major advances in feminist theory, of which the sex/gender distinction would be just one. This problematic constitutes the staple of feminist theory in much of the world, including India. Theorizing the subject of “women,” the women’s movement and feminism over the last two centuries in India, however, brings a somewhat different problematic to the fore, best captured by the tensions and conflicts between culture and politics. Taking its cue from problems and impasses besetting the women’s movement in India today (such as the question of a uniform civil code and political representation for women) this paper argues for the urgency of comparative and transnational feminisms to tackle the problems of the present.

Mary E. John completed her Ph.D. in the History of Consciousness Program in 1991. She is currently Senior Fellow at the Centre for Women’s Development Studies, New Delhi, India. Her publications include A Question of Silence? The Sexual Economies of Modern India (co-edited with Janaki Nair, Kali for Women. New Delhi, 1998 and Zed Press, 2000). She is currently completing a project on the history of women’s studies in India.

 

April 11, 2001 – Sheila Rowbotham: "Promise of a Dream"

Wednesday, April 11 | Kresge 159 | 7:00 PM

Sheila Rowbotham is one of the leading British socialist feminists of the past 30 years. She is the author of numerous books, including Woman’s Consciousness, Man’s World (1973),  Hidden from History: 300 Years of Women’s Oppression and the Fight Against It (1973),  The Past is Before Us: Feminism in Action Since the 1960s (1989), and more recently, Women Encounter Technology: Changing Patterns of Employment in the Third World (1995), and Threads Through Time: Writings on History and Autobiography (1999).

She is also the author of a memoir, “Promise of a Dream,” recently published by University of Manchester Press. During her visit to UCSC, she will read from the memoir and hold a booksigning.

Co-sponsored by the Women’s Studies Department, the Institute for Humanities Research, the Center for Cultural Studies, and the Women’s Center.