Veranstaltungstipp

Dienstag, 10. April 2018, 18:00 - 20:00 iCal

(be)coming home

International Lecture Series

Unterrichtsraum, Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik
Spitalgasse 2-4, 1090 Wien

Lecture


Weitere Termine

Dienstag, 06. März 2018, 18:00 - 20:00

Dienstag, 20. März 2018, 18:00 - 20:00

Dienstag, 17. April 2018, 18:00 - 20:00

Dienstag, 24. April 2018, 18:00 - 20:00

Dienstag, 08. Mai 2018, 18:00 - 20:00

Dienstag, 15. Mai 2018, 18:00 - 20:00

Dienstag, 29. Mai 2018, 18:00 - 20:00

Dienstag, 05. Juni 2018, 18:00 - 20:00

Dienstag, 12. Juni 2018, 18:00 - 20:00

Dienstag, 19. Juni 2018, 18:00 - 20:00

This interdisciplinary lecture series addresses the many configurations and struggles of how "home" becomes meaningful, when it is approached in terms of mobilities: Voluntary or forced, physical or imaginative, there are strong relations and tensions between forms of motion, movement, flows, transport, travel, communication and home-making.

Migration, exile, refugees and post-colonial diaspora testify to how historical and geopolitical processes have always enforced mobility on a large scale and have thus troubled understandings of home as enrooted life and located safe space - an idea that the latest rise of nationalistic tendencies, border-walls and homeland-security, ironically, fiercely pursues and protects. A global economic system asks and responds to flexible employees and consumers working away from home, accelerating commuting, travel and circulation of goods, but also promotes home offices with cloud-based desktops and ready available products and information; governments using spyware to monitor citizens as much as "smart homes" make the right to non-interference with one’s home (as laid down in Article 12 in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights) urgently debated, while the real-estate bubble burst and the housing crisis displaces people, AirBnB and Uber commodify the private spheres of house and car. These are just a few examples that show that home is a symbolically and materially contested, permeable and mobile category of space, identity and belonging. In that sense, home may be best understood in terms of affective space- and placemaking practices, imbued with exclusionary logics and contingent on power relations. The question who is in- or outside home (be it the feeling, the private sphere, a residence, a family, a community or nation) then needs to be expanded with who (and what) can where, why and how move or stay.

With various case studies and points of departures, the guest speakers will discuss manifestations, experiences, imaginations and theories of home on ideological, socio-historical and cultural grounds.

(1) 06.03.2018 Introduction

Barbara Maly-Bowie (University of Vienna)

 

(2) 14.03.2018 Key Note: Home Territories - Virtual and Material Geographies

Prof. David Morley (Goldsmiths, London)

 

(3) 20.03.2018 "Doing Home: The Politics and Practices of Home in Anglophone and British Writing"

Prof. Sarah Heinz (University of Vienna)

 

(4) 10.04.2018 "Kazi na kuwa mfanyakazi - Work as Home in Labour Settlements in Lubumbashi (DR Congo)"

Dr. Daniela Waldburger (University of Vienna)

 

(5) 17.04.2018 Girls at home - feminist insights into the private sphere(s) of US Television

Elisabeth Lechner (University of Vienna)

 

(6) 24.04.2018 Between the Batcave and the (urban) Battlefield: American Superheroes and the (De)-Stabilization of the Home

Ranthild Salzer (University of Vienna)

 

(7) 08.05.2018 W. H. Auden’s Austrian Home: Object-Things in the Home-Turned-Museum

Timo Frühwirth (University of Vienna)

 

(8) 15.05.2018 Blogging Descent: Genetic Ancestry Testing, Whiteness and the Limits of Anti-racism

Dr. Katherine Tyler (University of Exeter)

 

(9) 22.05.2018 Home as a prison? Postcolonial negotiations of the home(land)

Syntia Hasenöhrl (University of Vienna)

 

(10) 29.05.2018 Everyday Bordering and Hierarchies of Belonging in the Context of the Brexit Continuum

Dr. Georgie Wemyss (University of East London)

 

(11) 05.06.2018 Stories Make Place: Indigenous Homescapes in Literary Motion

Alexandra Hauke (University of Passau)

 

(12) 12.06.2018 "A 'civil wildness': Caroline Kirkland's A New Home, Who'll Follow? (1839)

Prof. Alexandra Ganser-Blumenau (University of Vienna)

 

(13) 19.06.2018 Sharing is Caring: Forms of Quartering from Billy Wilder’s The Apartment to Airbnb & recap

Roman Kabelik (University of Vienna)

 

Organizers: Barbara Maly-Bowie, Syntia Hasenöhrl, Roman Kabelik, Sarah

Heinz, Monika Seidl

 

anglistik.univie.ac.at

 

In cooperation with the Department of Political Science, the Research Platform Mobile Cultures and Societies, the Angewandte Innovation Laboratory of the University of Applied Arts and the Austrian Academy of Sciences


Veranstalter

Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik


Kontakt

Roman Kabelik
Institut für Germanistik
+43 1 4277 42229
roman.kabelik@univie.ac.at