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Announcement: American Studies Grad Conference Call for Abstracts Deadline Extended - February 7!

Historic American Buildings Survey Earl H. Reed, Photographer June 1937 FRONT VIEW - EARLY DWELLING (Opposite Old Tavern) - Ogden Avenue (House), Fullersburg, Du Page County, IL HABS ILL,22-FULB,2-1The graduate students of the Department of American Studies at UT will be hosting a conference, "Home/Sickness," on April 2-3, 2015. The organizing committee has extended the deadline for abstract submissions until February 7, so if you're a graduate student in any discipline who has research to share based loosely upon the theme of home and sickness, consider submitting! Just follow this link and fill out the very brief form - and, of course, spread the word to any and all interested parties.More details about the conference theme:

The death of eighteen-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri this August, the immigration crisis centering primarily around the recent influx of children from Central America to the United States, and the growing panic over the spread of the ebola virus can all be read as the newest manifestations of a long-running pattern throughout American history and culture: the relationship between constructions of “healthy” communities, the fear that these communities will be violated, invaded, or contaminated, and the mobilization of these fears as justification for action in the name of community preservation. The history of the United States is littered with rhetorical constructions of safety and security, purity and contamination—as well as with the results of very real processes of violence, displacement, and exclusion.With this in mind, we invite presenters to consider constructions of home and health, and to explore how these concepts have been and continue to be mobilized in the construction and erasure of American communities, families, and selves. What processes are involved in the construction of a sense of home, either personal or communal? Who gets to define the boundaries of community? What relationships and investments does the name “home” imply? What produces a sense of homesickness, and what does this sense of nostalgia in turn produce? What does a “healthy”—or a “sick”—community look like? What is the relationship between community construction and processes of exclusion, abjection, and othering? We invite both papers that reflect on the present moment as well as explorations of the shifting terrain of home and health in American history.Submissions from all disciplines are welcome.