American Studies and the Question of Empire:Histories, Cultures and Practices November 19-22, 1998
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8:00AM - 3:00PM
Visual Imagery and Cultural Contact
Hypertext and American Studies: Theory, Practice, Knowledge
Rethinking American Imperialism Inside/Out
Mixing Metaphors: Race and Sexuality in American Culture
The Politics of Neutral Ground, 1820-1830
The Reel World Order: Contemporary Film and Cultural/National Citizenship
Philippines and Global Culture
Anywhere But (T)here: Placing the "Citizenry"
The Empire of the Lens: Anglo-American Women Photographers among the Indians
Performance, History, and Spirit in Contemporary Chicana Cultural Practices
Using What's There: Doing American Studies at Community Colleges
Information, Inquiry, and Knowledge: Opportunities and Problems in Using New
Technologies to Teach American Studies
Skin Deep: American Indian Literature as Anti-colonial Resistance
Understanding and Locating Chester Himes
Queer in American Studies
Imagining the Body: Pedagogies of Modern Individuality in Late 19th-and Early
20th-century America
Passing in the Service of Empire: (Inter)national Bodies and the Trans-Mogrification of
American Culture
Afro-America in an International Frame
Toward the White Man's Burden: Race, Class, Gender and Nation in the 19th Century
Roundtable: Latina/o Popular Culture: Cultural Politics into the 21st Century
Hunting for Good Will: Building Opportunities for Interdisciplinary American Studies at
Community Colleges
Representation and Race
Cracking Down: The Reconsolidation of America as Police State
Displacements, Colonialisms, Alternative Knowledges: Asian Immigrant Women
Race and Nation in Contemporary Public Schooling
Writing the National Body
Cross-cultural Interpretations of the American Experience
Remapping Cultural Identity, beyond Race, Class and Gender
Gendering Vice: Early Twentieth-century Constructs of Femininity and Deviance
Religion and Folklore in an Inter-American Context
Asian American Labor and Culture
Legacies of 1898: Sovereignty and Colonialism in Puerto Rico, Cuba, Guam, The
Philippines and Hawai'i, and Their Implications for American Studies--A
Roundtable Discussion with Audience Participation
Beyond the Shadow of the Eagle: Models of Internationalizing African-American
Cultural and Literary Studies
What's "Black" about . . . ?
Roundtable: The Empire Turning within: The Politics of Policing Reform in Seattle
Sherman Alexie, Cultural Studies, and U.S. Emergent Literatures
Cold War "Orientations": Imagining U.S. Empire in Vietnam
Multicultural Politics and the Realist Theory of Identity
Bodies at Work: Women and/in the U.S. American "Free Market"
Parks, Exhibitions and Rituals of Empire
Rereading Canonical Texts
Becoming an Attraction: Perspectives from the Toured
(Dis)ordering Chicanos in Nation and Empire: Racing to and from Whiteness
Difference and American Empire: Three Phases of U.S. Internationality
Native American Political Resurgence and Activism
Immigrants, Blacks, and Ex-colonials: West Indian Life in the Twentieth-century U.S.
Conduct Becoming Citizens: The Political Life of Masculinity in Nineteenth-century
America
Race and Colonial Body Politics in the United States and Puerto Rico, 1865-1940
Roundtable: Empire and the Making of Asian Pacific American Anxiety in the American Century: Slander, Conspiracy and Rumor as Narratives of
Contested Nationalism
Europe, Africa and the Americas
Empires of Print: Antebellum Print Culture
The Business of American Studies
Roundtable: Interdisciplinary Pedagogy: Approaches to Gender and Globalization
Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing (SHARP) American
Studies Association Caucus Business Meeting
The Price of Empire: Public Ceremonies and Public Intellectuals in Cold War America
Negotiating Race and Citizenry in the Nineteenth Century
The Nation and Nationalism in Queer Art, Culture and Politics
1898/1998: Centennial of What?
Female Bodies and the National Imaginary
Constructing Race, Creating Nations: Relating African American and American Indian (Hi)stories
Black Women's Cultural and Political Production in the 1970s
Imperialized Alliances: Cross-cultural Readings between Chicano and Filipino-American Cultural Studies
Cold War Orientalisms
The Imagined Community of International American Studies
Medicine, Science, and Racialized Power
Against Derealization: Assault, New Media, and Empire Exposed
More than One Movement: Conflicting Definitions of "Civil Rights" in the 1960s
Cultures of Revolution/Revolution in Cultures: Forging Identities, Building Movements
Overcoming the Boarding School Experience in American Indian Education: Views from the Rez to Academia
Latent Destiny: Queering the Critique of United States Imperialism
Staging Racial Conflict
Where We Stand--Coloring American Studies: A Roundtable Discussion with the
Audience Facilitated by Graduate Students and Faculty of Color
Race, Gender, Empire: The Politics of Expansion in Nineteenth-century America
Essentializing Class
Century of Eugenics: Permutations of the Gene Dream, 1890s-1990s
Murderous Desires: Violence and Alternative Sexualities
International Committee Business Meeting
The Empire Crawls Back: Gerber Classics and the Imperial Work of Children's Texts
P.T. Barnum's Empire: Rethinking Its Impact in 19th-century America
On Inter-American Cultural Criticism
Native American Studies/ASA Caucus
Rewriting the West: War, Migration, and Empire, 1848-1898
Are the Cats Still Singing? Modernity, Prostitution and the "Silent" Politics of Translation
Masculinity, Social Space, and Disciplinary Practices
The Cultural Practices of Country Music: An Interdisciplinary Panel
Building Empire at Home: Domestic Forms of American "Colonization"
Sweatshop Lit.
Nationalism/Immigration/Neocolonialism
All Quiet on the Home Front? Life and Labor in World War II America
Focus on Teaching Day I: American Mosaic: An Experiment in Community-based
Multicultural Education
The American Quarterly and the Future of American Studies
Others in American Education: Nationalism, Ethnicity and Democratic Possibility
Roundtable: Re/Encountering Vietnam
War and the Woman Citizen in Late Twentieth-century America
The Continental Imagination of the Americas
Creolizing "America": African American/Caribbean Culture Dialogue
Internal Empires: Ethnic Studies Perspectives on Environmental Racism
The Early Republic and Empire
Stomping Culture: Albert Murray's Omni-American Studies
Empire, Expansion, and Environment
Cultural Hegemonies, Southern States and Queer Spaces
Writing Empire: A Roundtable of Critical Historiographies
Subalternality Is ABOUT the U.S. and Imperialism: Sites and Citations of Pan-American Revolutionary (Trans) Nationalism
Mapping Culture
Culture, Ethnicity, and Migration
Cross-cultural Readings
Anthropology, History, and Myth
Conflicts along the Columbia: Place, People, Power
Imperial Fantasies: Sex, Empire, and the Construction of the Other in Cold War U.S. Foreign Relations
Focus on Teaching Day II: Teaching Class: A Conversation, "Uncloaking Class"
Roundtable: Women Negotiating Multiple Identities: Perspectives from around the World
Roundtable: Visual Cultures - Current Methods and Frameworks
Women in Prison: Out from Behind the Walls of Invisibility
Postmodern Geographies and Anti-imperial Subjectivities
Nation and Deformation: Violence and National Narrative before 1898
Plotting U.S. Latino/a Culture
Roundtable: The Empire of the "Normal": Disability and Self-Representation in
Autobiography
Post-colonial British Columbia: Models for Re-envisioning Colonialism, First Nations
Conquest, and Power in North America
Imperial Visions and Critiques
Roundtable - Part I: Textual Migrations & Cultural Border X-ings
Pedagogical Counterpractices and Alternative Educational Sites: A Workshop
United States Military Empire: Complex Inequalities of Race, Gender, Class and Nation
"Indian Reform," Gender Anxiety and the Domestic Empire
Hollywood, History, and the American Imaginary
The American Renaissance, American Literature, and the Empire of Academia
Roundtable: Failing the Future? A Conversation on Higher Education and the Nation in the Twenty-first Century
Utopian or Imperial Visions?
Fear of Exchange: Xenophobia and Economic Nationalisms
Technologies of Empire
Focus on Teaching Day IV: What's Appropriate, What's Appropriation? Teaching Native American Issues in Secondary Education
Knowledge from below: C.L.R. James and John La Rose Re-imagining the Americas
Focus on Teaching Day V: Philosophical and Practical Applications of Asian American Studies in Secondary Schools
More on Positive and Negative Images: The Case of Kara Walker, Artist
The American Prison and American Studies
Transforming Cultural Practices: Challenging the Traditional American Studies
Classroom
Roundtable: Organizing in the Trenches: Graduate Students and the Unionization
Movement
Sexual Citizenship
Old and New Historical Narratives
Images of Combat: Stage, Screen, and Photography
Chicana/o Studies and the Question of Empire: An Inquiry into the Literary and National Aspects of the Chicana/o Subject
Radio Voices and the Construction of Social Identity, 1927-1947
Chronicle of Higher Education Reception
The Empire Comes "Home": Of Consumption and Cultural Citizenship
Media, Consumption and American Transnationalities: Identities, Markets and
Nationalisms in Late Capitalism
Space, Place, and Power: Local Geographies and the Built Environment
Articulating Race: International Capitalisms and Marxist Internationalisms
Popular Music and U.S. Empire
Troubling Silences in the Sound of Surprise: Jazz and the Intersection of Racial and Gender Politics
Imagined Communities/Tele-visions
Material Reality Off the Cuff: Clothing, Culture, and Commercialism
Coalition and Collision: Issues for Researchers
The West: Business, Religion, the Environment and Empire
The Other American Studies: Vocational Education and Race in U.S. Culture
Ethni-city: Ethnic Transformations of Built Landscapes
The Imperial Unconsciousness: Violence and Racial Formation in the U.S.
The Fear of Going Home: Nationalism and Masculinity in Queer Chicano Texts
Music, Race, and Politics
Race and Sex in American Dance
Cultures in Contact: Film/Video in the Caribbean and Caribbean Diaspora
Antebellum Masculinities and the Rise of American Empire
Physical Place and Social Space
Thursday, November 19, 1998
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Business Meeting of the ASA National Council
9:30AM - 10:30AM
Pre-convention Workshop for American Studies Program Directors:
The American Studies Degree
11:00AM - 12:30PM
Pre-convention Workshop for American Studies Program Directors:
American Studies Pedagogy
12:00PM - 1:45PM
Migrating Musics: Postcolonial Approaches to Popular Music in the Caribbean and Its Diaspora
1:00PM - 3:00PM
Committee on American Studies Programs Business Meeting
2:00PM - 3:45PM
The "Imperial Market": Determination and Agency in the Mid-twentieth Century
Culture Industries
2:00PM - 4:00PM
Minority Scholars' Committee Business Meeting
3:00PM - 6:00PM
International Women's Task Force Business Meeting
3:00PM - 7:00PM
American Quarterly Board Meeting
4:00PM - 5:45PM
Movidas y Movimientos: Social Networks among Musicians, Artists, and Vendedoras in
Latino Los Angeles
5:00PM - 6:00PM
Business Meeting of the Material Culture Caucus
5:30PM
Northwest Writers Reading: Sherman Alexie, Crystos, Colleen McElroy, and Shawn
Wong
6:00PM - 7:00PM
Business Meeting of the Visual Culture/Art History Caucus
6:00PM - 7:00PM
International Reception
7:00PM - 9:00PM
Students' Committee Business Meeting
7:30PM - 9:00PM
Ethnic Studies Program Directors and Faculty Workshop
9:00PM - 10:30PM
Minority Scholars' Committee, Women's Committee and the Sexual Minority
Scholars(hip) Caucus Reception
Friday, November 20, 1998
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7:30AM - 10:00AM
International Women's Breakfast
8:00AM - 2:00PM
Student Hospitality Lounge
8:00AM - 9:45PM
Visions of Empire in West Coast Public Art
10:00AM - 11:45PM
"Race," Place, and the Archive: Photographing National Identity
12:00PM - 1:45PM
Empire and Interiority: Pedagogies of Race and Citizenship
1:00PM - 4:00PM
Empirical Images: The Photographic Practice of Nation Building
4:00PM - 5:45PM
Space and Social Identities
4:00PM - 6:00PM
University of Minnesota Reception
7:00PM - 7:45PM
Award Ceremony for ASA Prize Recipients
8:00PM - 9:30PM
President's Address: What's in a Name
9:30PM - 12:30AM
Saturday, November 21, 1998
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7:00AM - 9:00AM
Breakfast for Women in American Studies
7:45AM - 9:45AM
GLASA Program Committee Breakfast Meeting
8:00AM - 9:45AM
By Land and by Sea: Revisioning America's "Empire" at Home and Abroad
8:00AM - 11:00AM
Student Hospitality Room
10:00AM - 11:45PM
The Future of the Past: Nationalism, Nostalgia, and Quotation
11:30AM - 1:00PM
Disabilities Caucus Business Meeting
12:00AM - 1:45PM
Questioning the Empire: Pacific Northwest Asian-Pacific Americans Challenging
Mainstream Paradigms
12:00PM - 2:00PM
Focus on Teaching Day III:
Luncheon Speaker: Johnnella Butler
1:00PM - 4:00PM
ASA Students' Committee Mock Interviews
2:00PM - 3:45PM
Colonized Bodies and Representative Democracy
2:00PM - 6:00PM
Regional Chapters Business Meeting
3:00PM - 5:00PM
Business Meeting of the 1999 Program Committee
4:00PM - 5:45PM
Half Lives: Manifest Destiny in the Nuclear Age
5:30PM - 7:00PM
University of Michigan Reception
5:30PM - 7:00PM
Music of the Americas Caucus Reception
6:00PM - 7:30PM
Part II: Poetries 'Cross the Americas (An Evening Reading)
6:30PM - 8:30PM
NYMASA and NEASA Joint Reception
6:15PM - 7:30PM
Business Meeting of the ASA Sexual Minority Caucus
Sunday, November 22, 1997
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8:00AM - 9:45AM
The Empire in the Archive: Mining Sites of U.S. Colonial Knowledge
9:00AM - 11:00AM
Breakfast Meeting of the 1999 Program Committee
10:00AM - 11:45AM
Roundtable: Managing Revolutions and Diversity Wars: Corporate Cultures as American Cultures