Samstag, 5. August 2017

#CFP: 2nd #NEST (Narrative Enquiry for #SocialTransformation) International Conference; Johannesburg, South Africa; 22-24 March, 2018

2nd NEST (Narrative Enquiry for Social Transformation) International Conference,

22-24 March, 2018, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

First Call for papers and panels

Conference Theme

NEST (Narrative Enquiry for Social Transformation) is a research network launched in July 2015 with the aim to foster the theory and practice of narrative as a field of study through interdisciplinary research and empirical investigations into questions of human experience, development and social change. Its members are drawn from the Humanities and Social Sciences as well as creative and community-based constituencies. The current configuration of the NEST network allows for an articulation between the Arts, Social Sciences and Socio-psychological work.

NEST is informed by the principle that narrative is one of the defining features of what it means to be human. Personal and collective senses of self, experience, desires, fears and hopes are developed in and through narrative meaning-making, providing recognition and validation, and deepening our sense of human dignity across lines of difference and existence. The transformative possibilities of narrative lie in the ways in which it enables people to: give coherence to their lives and the world around them; develop forms of critical consciousness and thinking; imagine possible alternative social realities and futures; and, ultimately, not only to read them-selves and their place in the world but also to be read by others. It is people who make culture and culture that in turns remakes us, and this process is always political and potentially transformative.

Research Threads

NEST seeks to undertake research that traces ideologies, experiences and identities across time as constructed through inter / cross generational experience and storytelling; the reconstruction of (cultural memory); and transmission of unofficial histories and alternative narratives by ordinary people, particularly in families, communities, educational and creative contexts. Its research agenda incorporates a wide range of theoretical and critical conceptual and creative work that can be undertaken from multiple disciplinary perspectives and methodologies. The following constitute the core thematic threads of NEST:

·         The narrative formation of consciousness and subjectivities

·         Marginality, the body, affect and narrative

·         Narrative form and symbolic representations in multiple modalities: textual, visual, archival, aural and performative.

·         Intergenerational narratives.

·         Developing knowledge and praxis through empirical projects

 

We invite papers and panels that use NEST research threads as a catalyst but other explorations of any aspects related to narrative are also welcome.

Please send abstracts of up to 300 words for individual papers and / or panels by 15 October 2017 to the conveners at Jill.Bradbury@wits.ac.za and Bhekizizwe.Peterson@wits.ac.za

 Once abstracts have been accepted, participants will be notified. The conference will take the form of pre-circulated papers for discussion.  Full Papers will be due a month in advance of the conference to allow sufficient time for discussants to read.

 Conveners: Jill Bradbury and Bhekizizwe Peterson

Committee Members: Hugo Canham, Lindelwa Dalamba, Cynthia Kros, Ronelle Carolissen, Grace Musila, Khwezi Mkhize

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Initiative Kritische Psychologie
Initiative Critical Psychology

Daniel Sanin
Klinischer und Gesundheitspsychologe
Clinical and Health Psychologist

www.facebook.com/criticalpsychology
www.twitter.com/critpsych
www.youtube.com/user/critpsych

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