Monash University - Faculty of Arts

Arts Faculty Events

Events from the Faculty of Arts, Monash University, Melbourne Australia

Upcoming Events

Conference: Religious Communication

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Monash University Conference Centre
Level 7, 30 Collins Street
Melbourne, Victoria

Keynote Speakers:

  • Professor Massimo Leone
    Australian Endeavour Award Fellow in English, Communications and Performance Studies at Monash University, and Research Professor of Cultural Semiotics at the Department of Philosophy, University of Torino, Italy
  • Professor Lori Beaman
    Canadian Research Chair in the Contextualisation of Religion in a Diverse Canada, and Professor in the Department of Religious Studies and Classics, University of Ottawa, Canada

Registration now open.

The conference will focus on religious communication and religious aesthetic forms. The underlying impulse is to bring into dialogue scholarly work undertaken in religious studies and theology with debates and research in the fields of communications and cultural studies, including performance, literary, visual and aesthetic analyses. The premise of the conference is that communication and aesthetic forms play an active role in shaping a religious culture’s sensibility rather than merely reflecting that religious community’s ideology, logic or worldview. In short, religious communication makes religious experience meaningful, possible and effective.

The conference is particularly interested in exploring:

  • religious affect and its relationship to different media (e.g., song, prayer, architecture, film, performance, images in general)
  • religious interpretation and textual hermeneutics (e.g., literalism versus symbolism)
  • the use of communication media and art forms by religious groups to create a sense of community
  • communication as a ‘portal’ or window to the ‘divine’ and/or the ‘sacred’
  • cross-cultural adaptation and the creolisation of religious forms
  • teligion and the sacred in popular culture
  • modernity, post-modernity and religious communication.

This conference will be held immediately prior to the World Parliament of Religions, providing an opportunity for reflection on religious practice and the relationship between religious identity and the aesthetic forms of religious communication, and cross cultural communication.

Further information and registration at the Religious Communication Conference site.

Workshop: EU-ASEAN Relations in the 21st Century

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Caulfield Campus
900 Dandenong
Monash University
Victoria

EU-ASEAN Relations in the 21st Century: Towards a ‘Strategic Partnership’?  26-27 November 2009

Keynote speakers

  • Professor Martin Holland, Director, National Centre for Research on Europe, University of Canterbury
  • Dr Yeo Lay Hwee, Director, European Union Centre, NUS, Singapore
  • Professor Joergen Oerstroem Moeller, Visiting Senior Research Fellow, ISEAS, Singapore, Member of the Board of Governors ASEF
  • Ambassador David Daly, Head of Delegation, Ambassador of the European Commission Delegation to Australia, Canberra
    or/and
  • Ms Lynne Hunter, Adviser, Bilateral Relations, to the Ambassador

The major themes to be addressed are:

  • Bridging the Perception Gap
  • EU-ASEAN: In Search for Common Values
  • ASEAN in the EU’s Asia Policy
  • Commonalities and Differences in Security Perspectives

Scientific Committee

Further information and registration

Visit Monash European and EU Centre

Produced by the Monash European and EU Centre and the Monash Asia Institute.

Conference: Philosophy and the Work of Art

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Caulfield Campus
900 Dandenong
Monash University
Victoria

Australasian Society for Continental Philosophy Annual Conference: Philosophy and the Work of Art

Keynote speakers include:

  • Tina Chanter, De Paul University, Chicago
  • Miguel de Beistegui, Warwick University, UK
  • Rosalyn Diprose, University of New South Wales, Australia
  • Steven Crowell, Rice University, Houston

The Conference will also include special sessions on the work of:

  • Genevieve Lloyd, Macquarie University, Australia
  • Jeff Malpas, University of Tasmania, Australia
  • Paul Redding, University of Sydney, Australia

The Australasian Society for Continental Philosophy was established in 1995 as the revamped Australasian Society for Phenomenology and Social Philosophy. Its original aims were to provide a broad intellectual forum for academics, writers, artists, and postgraduates researching topics in Contemporary European philosophy, and to thereby become the region’s premier reference point for people working within the diverse fields of Continental/European Philosophy. The Society currently holds an annual conference hosted by different Universities across the Australasian region.

Further information

http://www.conferences.monash.org/ascp2009/
http://www.ascp.org.au/

Produced by Research Unit in European Philosophy, School of English, Communications and Performance Studies

Lecture: Religion as Pathway to Peace

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Room H.126, Building H
Caulfield Campus
900 Dandenong
Monash University
Victoria

The Australian Centre for Jewish Civilisation presents a lecture by Rabbi Michael Melchior, former member of the Israeli parliament and Honorary Chief Rabbi of Norway. Serving as a Rabbi in Jerusalem, Rabbi Melchior promotes interreligious dialogue and campaigns for the peaceful coexistence of Arabs and Jews in Israel.

Symposium: To Be Or Not To Be…

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Performing Arts Precinct
Clayton Campus
Wellington Road
Monash University
Victoria

To be or not to be… asking questions of Performance as Research

A two-day symposium and masterclass

This event has a specific focus on how questions are asked within, and of, performance as an integral part of the research process. The symposium brings academic and professional practitioners together through performance presentations and discussion panels. It also presents an opportunity for honours and postgraduate students to present and discuss their own work.

Visit the symposium page for further information and to register.

Produced by the Performance Research Unit, School of English, Communications and Performance Studies

Colloquium: Aesthetics

Room H784, Level 7, Building H
Caulfield Campus
900 Dandenong
Monash University
Victoria

Aesthetics: An International Colloquium on Art, Aesthetics and Imagination

Presenters

  • Agnes Heller, “The Contemporary Historical Novel” (Keynote Paper)
  • Massimo Leone, “Afterlife and Second Life—The Virtual Varieties of Religious Experience”
  • David Roberts, “The Image and its Double. Three Theses on Illusion”
  • Elizabeth Burns Coleman, “Esthetic Appreciation as a Normative Ideal”
  • Peter Murphy, “Living in a Kitsch World: An Aesthetic Anthropology of Contemporary Infantilism”
  • Eduardo dela Fuente, “Georg Simmel and an Artefactual Theory of Communication”
  • Dimitris Vardoulakis, “Kafka’s Aesthetics of Imprisonment”
  • Thomas Ford, “Nineteenth-Century Climate Change”

A Colloquium Dinner will begin at 7.45pm, and will be held at “Django, Django” restaurant, 356 Brunswick Street Fitzroy (corner of Kerr and Brunswick Streets).

View the program and speaker biographies on the Social Aesthetics Research Unit site.

Register online

Enquiries: Peter.Murphy@arts.monash.edu.au

Colloquium: How Do I Look? Aesthetics Through Theory

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Rooms L2, G08 and G09, Law Building
Clayton Campus
Wellington Road
Monash University
Victoria

How Do I Look?  Aesthetics Through Theory

Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies 2009 Postgraduate Colloquium

Keynote speaker: Dr Alison Ross

While contemporary research in the humanities considers a broad range of questions, aesthetics arguably remains a central concern for us all. The colloquium organisers invite potential participants to reflect on their own research with regard to contemporary considerations of aesthetics. The overall intention remains the sharing of original ideas and research; accordingly, participants are under no obligation to narrow their focus.

The annual postgraduate colloquium provides a forum for sharing ideas to postgraduate students from the Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies and the wider Faculty. The colloquium is an opportunity for postgraduate students and emerging scholars, conducting research in literary studies, cultural studies or critical theory, to present aspects of their work. The colloquium seeks to provide a relaxed and supportive atmosphere for stimulating academic exchange.

Lunch and refreshments will be provided.

Prospective participants are invited to present a paper of 25–30 minutes length (plus discussion). Proposals should include a title and an abstract of 100–150 words. Presentations incorporating audiovisual media are welcome. Please mention any technical requirements and preferences as to date and time.

Enquiries and submissions: colloquium09@arts.monash.edu.au
Submission deadline for abstracts:
30 October 2009

Produced by the Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies.

Book Launch: Xanana Gusmao Biography

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Xanana Gusmao

Bella Union, Trades Hall
Corner of Lygon, Russell and Victoria Streets
Carlton, Victoria

‘Xanana: Leader of the Struggle for Independent Timor-Leste’ by Sara Niner

To be launched by Terry Bracks.

Timorese and World Music by Zelda Da.

Sara Niner’s new book is the political biography of Xanana Gusmão, leader of the East Timorese struggle for self-determination and first President of the new nation of Timor-Leste.

Twenty-four years of warfare with Indonesia transformed Xanana from an apolitical outsider into a tough guerrilla commander and, ultimately, the central unifying figure of East Timorese nationalism.

In 1999, upon his bittersweet homecoming after years of imprisonment in Indonesia, Xanana faced the unenviable task of leading a traumatised people out of the terrifying violence and destruction that ended the Indonesian occupation. Today, the politics of East Timor remain volatile and complex, and many challenges still exist for this tiny new nation.

This is the story of a remarkable man and gifted leader.

Dr Sara Niner is a writer, research consultant and Honorary Research Associate with the School of Political and Social Inquiry where she has recently finished a Post-Doctoral Fellowship focussing on women, handcrafts and development in Timor-Leste. She is the editor of  To Resist is to Win: the Autobiography of Xanana Gusmão with selected letters and speeches (2000).

Xanana: Leader of the Struggle for Independent Timor-Leste is published by Australian Scholarly Publishing.

Conference: Trauma, Memory and Transformation

Trauma, Memory and Transformation: The Malaysian and Southeast Asian Experience

Important Dates

  • Submission of Abstract: Monday 2 November 2009
  • Notification of Acceptance: Tuesday 1 December 2009
  • Submission of Conference Paper: Monday 3 May 3 2010

In recent humanities and social science research there has been a cross disciplinary interest in notions of both trauma and memory. Trauma is seen as a moment of profound alteration and change in the lives of both individuals and communities. The range of catalysts for the assessment of trauma is wide, from the effects of war, terrorism, state violence and natural disaster through to the more personal instances of trauma such as illness, sexual identity acceptance and survivors of crime, including survivors of gender based violence.

The study of memory has also been an important development in the humanities and social sciences. Memory study complements more traditional historical discourse by offering alternative pathways to an assessment of personal and shared experience. Memory Studies provides subaltern communities with a distinctive opportunity to have their recollections and memories considered as a part of a living history—revealing narratives that might be alternative to the grand narratives of national and regional historic discourse(s).

This conference wishes to scrutinize localised Malaysian and Southeast Asian responses to trauma through an analysis of a variety of case studies that are informed by memory and that reveal as a result patterns of transformation that have arisen. How do individuals and communities in Southeast Asia respond to trauma? How is trauma overcome? What role does reflection play in the process of transformation? What particular features do the Malaysian and Southeast Asian experiences of a range of traumas add to our understanding of trauma and memory at a global level?

Participants for this conference can bring experience from a wide and diverse array of discipline backgrounds including, but not limited to:

  • Southeast Asian Studies
  • Cultural Studies
  • International Relations
  • Political Science
  • History
  • Literary Studies
  • Film Studies
  • Anthropology
  • Sociology
  • Psychology
  • History of Medicine
  • Development Studies
  • Economics
  • Gender Studies
  • Law and Legal Studies
  • Health Sciences and Medicine

As the conference wishes to explore the nature of applied practice in relation to the areas of trauma and memory we invite the participation of those outside the academy. The work of Non-Governmental and Civil Society groups in these areas is important in Southeast Asia and the conference anticipates their valuable participation and input. Proposals for papers that address gender and the diversities of sexuality will be warmly welcomed.

Abstracts and Panel proposals not exceeding 500 words should accompany a brief biography and be sent no later than Monday November 2, 2009 to:

Benjamin McKay
Lecturer, School of Arts and Social Sciences
Monash University Sunway
Jalan Lagoon Selatan
46150 Bandar Sunway
Selangor Darul Ehsan, Malaysia

Email: benjamin.mckay@sass.monash.edu.my
Fax: +60 3 5514 6365

Conference: Changing the Climate: Utopia, Dystopia & Catastrophe

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  • Monash Conference Centre
    Level 7
    30 Collins Street
    Melbourne
    Victoria 3000
    Australia

The Fourth Australian Conference on Utopia, Dystopia and Science Fiction

30 August–1 September 2010

A conference organised by the Centre for Comparative Literature and Cultural Studies at Monash University.

Visit the ‘Changing the Climate: Utopia, Dystopia and Catastrophe’ conference site