Subject: | |
From: | |
Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:18:26 2006 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
Parts/Attachments: |
|
|
===================== HES POSTING ====================
Laboring For a New Empire: Alternative Formations of Work and Workers in
the Nineteenth Century
(American Studies Association 1998, Seattle, November 19-22, 1998 -- for
info about the conference see:
http://www.georgetown.edu/crossroads/asanews/cfp1998.html)
The United States in the nineteenth century transformed itself from a
series of local economies into a national market that sought out
international resources. This march of a market economy tried to bring
artisans to heel. It commodified factory labor. And the process
exacerbated racial and gendered divisions among laborers. Labor historians
have documented, for example, how the Antebellum creation of whiteness
fueled the racial division among free laborers in the North. This panel
will focus on the texts and other cultural artifacts that chart work or
workers during this nineteenth- century transition. A focus on workers and
writing about workers promises to excavate opposition and alternative
formulations to markets and empire. Writing about labor also offers the
chance to explore the growth of whiteness, gender role divisions,
ideologies of masculinity and sexual practices in these larger narratives.
Examples appear in slave narratives, novels and nineteenth-century
discussions of science, technology, race and economics. Send a 200-word
abstract and a two-page vita by January 1, 1998 to Todd Vogel, American
Studies, 303 Garrison Hall, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas
78712; email preferred at: [log in to unmask]
Todd Vogel
The University of Texas at Austin
<[log in to unmask]>
============ FOOTER TO HES POSTING ============
For information, send the message "info HES" to [log in to unmask]
|
|
|