Crisis and Recovery in World History

Crisis and Recovery in World History

Organizer
Southeast World History Association
Venue
online
ZIP
30302
Location
Atlanta, Georgia
Country
United States
From - Until
22.10.2021 - 23.10.2021
Deadline
30.09.2021
By
Connections Redaktion, Leipzig Research Centre Global Dynamics, Universität Leipzig

We encourage proposals for individual papers, panels, roundtable discussions, information sessions, interactive media presentations, pedagogical demonstrations, and simulations on the general theme, “Crisis and Recovery in World History.”

Crisis and Recovery in World History

The deadline for proposals to the Southeast World History Association's 33rd annual conference has been extended to 30 September. Our conference this year will again take place virtually, and we will waive our normal conference fee. (Presenters and moderators are still required to pay our modest membership fee.)

We encourage proposals for individual papers, panels, roundtable discussions, information sessions, interactive media presentations, pedagogical demonstrations, and simulations on the general theme, “Crisis and Recovery in World History.” Proposals may address, but are not restricted to, the following questions: When is it appropriate to describe a crisis as “global,” and how might crises localized in specific regions, networks, or nation states spread to the world system? How do environmental factors like climate, disease, and ecology cause, intensify, or accelerate critical turning points in economic, political, and cultural history? Can crises also be catalysts of positive change? Crisis has often been associated with (mostly Western) modernity, the modern experience of time, and modern economic and political forms. How does the meaning and applicability of the crisis trope change if looked at from the point of view of non-Western societies, and how was the metaphor used in premodern and ancient societies?

Participation in SEWHA conferences and membership in our organization are NOT restricted to individuals in the southeastern US. We invite scholars from around the country and the world to take advantage of this year’s virtual format.

Please submit proposals of not more than 250 words, contact information, and relevant affiliation as a single Word Document or PDF. Panel proposals should be submitted as a single document with a short abstract for the panel, along with abstracts for each individual paper and contact information for each presenter, moderator, discussant, etc. Panels may include three or four presenters and a chair/moderator. Paper presentations should be no longer than fifteen minutes. Due to the virtual format, panel sessions will be limited to sixty minutes for a three-person panel and seventy-five minutes for a four-person panel. Roundtable and other discussion-based presentations should submit a list of participants, affiliations, and a single abstract outlining the general theme. Please send submissions and correspondence to Nick Di Liberto, President of SEWHA, ndiliberto77@gmail.com.

As always, we also welcome panel and individual proposals dealing with any topic in world history and also the teaching of world history.

Contact (announcement)

NIcholas Di Liberto
President, Southeast World History Association
ndiliberto77@gmail.com

https://www.sewha.org/conference/