This document provides the provisional conference program for the 14th International 'Culture & Power' Conference on "Identity and Identification" taking place from April 22-24, 2010 at the University of Castilla-La Mancha in Ciudad Real, Spain. The conference will include keynote speeches, parallel paper presentation sessions, and a book presentation over the three day period, covering topics related to identity, identification, representation, and cultural studies. Presentations will be organized into panels and will address issues such as virtual identities, gender identities, African women's identities, and theoretical perspectives on identity and identification processes.
This document discusses requirements for global marketing communications and how it has changed the global advertising industry. It covers several topics: differences in marketing Barbie versus Mulan globally due to cultural factors; using sales promotions and public relations in international markets; developing integrated marketing communications; considerations for international advertising campaigns including goals, messages, and media; and issues with legal constraints, cultural diversity, media limitations, and controlling advertising across borders. The overall structure of the global advertising industry is changing due to increased requirements for marketing communications in different countries and cultures worldwide.
Marketing Mix of Barbie dolls under the brand name of Mattel. A little description about mattel as a company and then discussion on 4 p's of barbie along with recommendations on how to improve further.
Barbie was introduced in 1956 and was named after Mattel co-founder's daughter. She was originally sold for $3 and over 350,000 dolls were sold in her first year. Barbie products now account for 40% of Mattel's annual sales. Over the last 40 years, an estimated 90% of American girls have owned at least one Barbie doll. Barbie has had a long and evolving history including meeting Ken in 1959, introducing more diverse dolls in 1980, starring in movies and books, and having over 80 career occupations. She remains one of the most popular and highest selling toy franchises of all time.
I had to write an in-depth evaluation of The Walt Disney Company. I learned a lot about researching companies and finding the information that is available to us via the web. I put together a presentation and had to present it in front of my Marketing class. It was a very fascinating to find out the behind the scenes happenings and financial holdings of the company. I learned ways to find a companies Target market and segment it down.
Walt Disney was founded in 1923 and is now the largest entertainment conglomerate globally. The document analyzes Disney's strategic challenges and recommends updating its vision and mission statements to focus on customer satisfaction and engaging employees. It also recommends the strategic expansion of Disney's mobile gaming portfolio to capitalize on the growing mobile games market, which could reach $100 billion by 2017. This would allow Disney to adapt to shifting consumer preferences and technological changes.
This curriculum vitae summarizes Jean De Groot's education and career. She received her PhD from Harvard University in 1980 and is currently a professor at the Catholic University of America. Her areas of research include ancient Greek philosophy, Aristotle, and the history of science. She has authored and edited several books and published over 20 academic papers on these topics.
The document summarizes presentations, research projects, exhibitions, awards and field work by faculty and students at Marymount College. It describes projects and presentations by Professors Ogilvie, Brophy, Earle, Masri and Royal as well as exhibitions by Professor Vanderpool. It also lists current research projects by Professors McMahon, Ogilvie, Zanca, Royal, Earle, Sellar, Vanderpool, Levonian, Masri and Royal. Student research projects and award nominees are also mentioned. Photos show Professor Earle working in the field and research by Professor Zanca and an exhibition by Professor Vanderpool.
Gary Hall, Professor of Media and Cultural Studies, Conventry University – Op...infoclio.ch
This document summarizes key ideas from a longer text about posthumanism and the future of scholarly publishing. It discusses how major commercial publishers control a large percentage of academic journals and realize high profit margins. It also examines how open access publishing platforms license books and monographs. The document explores concepts from theorists like Braidotti who argue posthumanism requires rethinking humanities disciplines. It questions traditional notions of authorship and intellectual property emerging from commercial interests. Overall, the summary outlines debates around open access and posthumanism's implications for scholarly communication and institutional structures of universities.
This document discusses requirements for global marketing communications and how it has changed the global advertising industry. It covers several topics: differences in marketing Barbie versus Mulan globally due to cultural factors; using sales promotions and public relations in international markets; developing integrated marketing communications; considerations for international advertising campaigns including goals, messages, and media; and issues with legal constraints, cultural diversity, media limitations, and controlling advertising across borders. The overall structure of the global advertising industry is changing due to increased requirements for marketing communications in different countries and cultures worldwide.
Marketing Mix of Barbie dolls under the brand name of Mattel. A little description about mattel as a company and then discussion on 4 p's of barbie along with recommendations on how to improve further.
Barbie was introduced in 1956 and was named after Mattel co-founder's daughter. She was originally sold for $3 and over 350,000 dolls were sold in her first year. Barbie products now account for 40% of Mattel's annual sales. Over the last 40 years, an estimated 90% of American girls have owned at least one Barbie doll. Barbie has had a long and evolving history including meeting Ken in 1959, introducing more diverse dolls in 1980, starring in movies and books, and having over 80 career occupations. She remains one of the most popular and highest selling toy franchises of all time.
I had to write an in-depth evaluation of The Walt Disney Company. I learned a lot about researching companies and finding the information that is available to us via the web. I put together a presentation and had to present it in front of my Marketing class. It was a very fascinating to find out the behind the scenes happenings and financial holdings of the company. I learned ways to find a companies Target market and segment it down.
Walt Disney was founded in 1923 and is now the largest entertainment conglomerate globally. The document analyzes Disney's strategic challenges and recommends updating its vision and mission statements to focus on customer satisfaction and engaging employees. It also recommends the strategic expansion of Disney's mobile gaming portfolio to capitalize on the growing mobile games market, which could reach $100 billion by 2017. This would allow Disney to adapt to shifting consumer preferences and technological changes.
This curriculum vitae summarizes Jean De Groot's education and career. She received her PhD from Harvard University in 1980 and is currently a professor at the Catholic University of America. Her areas of research include ancient Greek philosophy, Aristotle, and the history of science. She has authored and edited several books and published over 20 academic papers on these topics.
The document summarizes presentations, research projects, exhibitions, awards and field work by faculty and students at Marymount College. It describes projects and presentations by Professors Ogilvie, Brophy, Earle, Masri and Royal as well as exhibitions by Professor Vanderpool. It also lists current research projects by Professors McMahon, Ogilvie, Zanca, Royal, Earle, Sellar, Vanderpool, Levonian, Masri and Royal. Student research projects and award nominees are also mentioned. Photos show Professor Earle working in the field and research by Professor Zanca and an exhibition by Professor Vanderpool.
Gary Hall, Professor of Media and Cultural Studies, Conventry University – Op...infoclio.ch
This document summarizes key ideas from a longer text about posthumanism and the future of scholarly publishing. It discusses how major commercial publishers control a large percentage of academic journals and realize high profit margins. It also examines how open access publishing platforms license books and monographs. The document explores concepts from theorists like Braidotti who argue posthumanism requires rethinking humanities disciplines. It questions traditional notions of authorship and intellectual property emerging from commercial interests. Overall, the summary outlines debates around open access and posthumanism's implications for scholarly communication and institutional structures of universities.
Adam Rosenblatt is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Peace, Justice, and Human Rights at Haverford College. He received his Ph.D. from Stanford University, where he specialized in forensic science and human rights. His research and teaching interests include transitional justice, science and technology studies, and global education. He has published a book on forensic investigations after mass atrocities and articles on topics such as DNA identification, sacred graves, and the human rights of victims. Prior to Haverford, he was an Assistant Dean and Professor at Champlain College.
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The humanities are academic disciplines that study human culture, beliefs, arts, and ideals. They examine what makes us human and complement the natural sciences. Studying the humanities teaches important cognitive and emotional skills like critical thinking and innovation that help us better understand ourselves, our society, and can lead to advances in both arts and sciences. The humanities are essential for obtaining proper knowledge of human values and responsibility.
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The 14th International ‘Culture & Power’ Conference: “Identity and Identification”
1. The 14th International ‘Culture & Power’ Conference: “Identity and Identification”
University of Castilla-La Mancha
Facultad de Letras,
Ciudad Real, Spain
22-24 April, 2010
2. CONFERENCE PROGRAMME (PROVISIONAL)
Thursday, 22nd April
1
08.30-10.00 Registration
10.00-10.30 Conference Inauguration
10.30-11.30 Plenary Lecture 1: “Financial Crises and Ecologies of Belonging.”
Prof. Dr. Lawrence Grossberg
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA
11.30-12.00 Coffee Break
12.00-13.30 – Parallel Sessions Session 1
Panel: “The Identity of Cultural Studies”
Aliosa Puzar (Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, Seoul, Republic of Korea): “Cultural Studies and/on Borders: Identity
Beyond Construction(ism).”
Idalina Conde (ISCTE-IUL Instituto Universitário de Lisboa ): “Crossed concepts: Identity, Habitus and Reflexivity.”
David Walton (U of Murcia, Spain): “Universities for Sale? Bologna: Academic Excellence and/or Free-Market Economic
Baloney? The Future of Cultural Studies: Perfomative Politics, Discontent Resistance and (De)Identification.”
Session 2
Panel: “Virtual and E-identities”
Stacey May Koosel (Estonian Academy of Arts): “Digital Identity: The Private and Public Paradox.”
Lorena Nessi (Nottingham Trent University / BBC, U.K.): “Identity and the Use of Social Networks: a Methodological
Approach.”
Maria Aparecida Padilha Ribeiro and Vera Helena Ferraz de Siqueira (Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil):
1
Registration will be open throughout the conference for those unable to register on Thursday.
3. “Identity Construction in Virtual Network: The Desire of the Perfect Body.”
Session 3
Panel: “Poetic Personas/Multiple Identities”
Ozlem Aydin (Zonguldak Karaelmas University, Turkey): “A Black Voice That is Scottish and Blue”: The Theme of Identity in
Jackie Kay’s Poetry.”
Sara Meyer (University of Haifa, Israel): “The Pain-Self Nexus in Elizabeth Bishop’s ‘In the Waiting Room’.”
Carmen Robertson (University of Regina, Canada): “Poet, Princess, Patriot, Posession.”
Session 4
Panel: “African Women and Identity”
Bibian Pérez Ruiz (Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Spain): “Identity Construction of African Women in Literature: From
Colonized Beings to Authoritative Voices.”
Isabel Gil Naveira (Universidad de Oviedo, Spain): “La auto-reafirmación de la identidad femenina africana en la novela
Kehinde de Buchi Emecheta”.
Session 5
Panel: “The Construction of Gender Identities” (I)
Pedro Álvarez-Mosquera (Universidad de Salamanca, Spain): “Construyendo identidad: la masculinidad y la música rap”.
Josep María Armengol (Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Spain): “Que(e)rying Heterosexuality, Race-ing Whiteness: Re-
Visions of Heterosexuality and Whiteness in James Baldwin’s Works.”
Helena Ferraz de Siquiera, Glória de Fátima Rocha and Imira Fonseca de Azevedo (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil): “Identities Construction Among Nurses in a Brazilian Public University: Gender and other Marks of Difference.”
13:30-14:00 Book Presentation
4. 13.30-16.00 Break and Lunch
16.00-17.30 – Parallel Sessions Session 6
Panel: “Theorising Identities and Identification Processes” (I)
Jim Block (DePaul University in Chicago, USA): “Identification and the Project of Post-modern Identity.”
Mojgan Rahbari (University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Ontario, Canada): “Researcher’s Insider/Outsider Identity
Dilemma in Cross-cultural Research.”
Rafael Luis Pompeia Gioielli (Universidade de São Paulo, Brazil): “Heading towards a Liquid Identity.”
Session 7
Panel: “Virtual and E-identities” (II)
Adrienne Shaw (University of Pennsylvania, USA): “Identity, Identification and Media Representation: A Reception Study of
Video Game Audiences.”
Valentina Gueorguieva (University of Sofia “St.Kliment Okhridski,” Bulgaria): Subcultural Styles/Ideologies on the Market of
Identities Punks, Heavy Metals, Emos, Hip-hoppers and Free-runners as Internet Subcultures.”
Session 8
Panel: Images of the Other: Identity, Representation and Travel Tales
Andrea Limberto Leite (University of São Paulo, Brazil): “Strangers in Brazil: The Image of Foreigners in Brazilian Theatre
Revues from the eEarly Twentieth Century.”
Saikiran Datta (Inst. Pol. Leiria, Portugal): “Towards a Rural Identity.”
Ricardo Marín (Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Spain): Hetero-image, Self-image, and Power in the English Vision of
Spain During the 16th and 17th Centuries.
5. Session 9
Panel: “Perspectives from ‘Down Under’: Identities in Australia”
Isabel Fraile Murlán (University of Zaragoza, Spain): “Because a Man is Born in a Stable…” - The Riddle of Australian
Identity in Janette Turner Hospital’s The Last Magician.”
Monica Turci (University of Bologna, Italy): “Deconstructing the Myth of Terra Nullius. A Cultural-linguistic Analysis of
“Migratory” by Les Murray.”
Neoparat Tananuraksakul (Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia): “Transnational Multiple Identities in Sojourners in an
“Imagining Village” in Australia.”
Session 10
Panel: “The Construction of Gender Identities” (II)
Gracia Trujillo Barbadillo (Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Spain): “La rebelión de ‘las otras’ o la crítica queer a la
identidad feminista.”
Vera Helena Ferraz de Siqueira and Marina Cardoso Gondin da Foseca (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil):
“Gender, Sexuality and the Emergence of Identities among University Pharmacy Students.”
17.30-18.00 Coffee Break
18.00-20.00 – Parallel Sessions Session 11
Panel: “Theorising Identities and Identification Processes” (II)
Senka Anastasova (University of Ss. Cyril & Methodius, Skopje, Republic of Macedonia): “Theorizing ‘splited’ identity.”
Begonya Sáez Tajafuerce (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain): “Challenging the Self: To Be One’s Other.”
Jesús González Fisac (Universidad de Cádiz, Spain): “¿Quién teme a los estudios culturales? La interdisciplinariedad o el
problema de la identidad académica) en Judith Butler.”
Leticia Sabsay (Universidad de Buenos Aires, Argentina): “Questioning Diversity: Sexual Borders, Identity and Liberal
Individuals.”
6. Session 12
Panel: “Translating Identities?”
Leila Cristina de Mello Darin (Pontificia Universidade Católica de São Paulo, Brazil): “Translator’s Representations in the
Construction and Transformation of his/her Identity.”
Taner Karakoç (Istambul University, Turkey): “The Identity of the Translator in Public Relations Translation Processes.”
Session 13
Panel: Images of the Other: Tourism and Representation
Grzegorz Moroz (University of Bialystok, Poland): “Anti-tourism and Camp as Strategies of Identity Creation in Evelyn
Waugh’s Labels.”
Candida Cadavez (Escola Superior de Hotelaria e Turismo do Estéril, Portugal): “The Portuguese Identity Through Tourist
Representations during Estado Novo.”
Brian M. Goss (Saint Louis University, Madrid Campus, Spain): “’Beyond the Duero’: The Junta de Extremadura’s Tourism
Discourse and its Constructions of Identity.”
Session 14
Panel: “Insights into Identity Assimilation and Integration Processes”
Sara Expósito (Lewis and Clark College Portland, Oregon, USA): “Immigrant Girls at Promise: The Creation of Possible Self
Through Writing.”
Lasse Thomassen (Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales, Madrid, Spain and Department of Politics, Queen Mary,
University of London): “The politics of Iterability: Benhabib, Hijab and Agency.”
Zvjezdana Topalovic (Institute of Education, University of London, UK): “Identity Formation through Participation in Social
Activities.”
Ricardo Mendoza Canales (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain): “Towards Post Post-Colonialism? Second
Generation Immigrant Writers and the Limits of Post-Colonial Theory.”
7. Session 15
Panel: “Ethnic and National Identity Reconstruction in Postcolonial Africa”
Eric Elong Ebolo (Centre Européen des Recherches Internationale et Stratégiques, Brussels, Belgium): “Identity, Ethno-
Regionalism and Democratisation in Cameroon: The case of the South West Chiefs Conference (SWECC).”
Obinna Ihunna (Federal University of Technology, Imo State, Nigeria): “The Paradox of Minority of a Majority: The Case of
the Igbo Nation in Nigeria.”
20.00-21.00 Break
21.00-23.30 Reception by Local Authorities in Ciudad Real
8. Friday, 23rd April
08.30-10.00 – Parallel Sessions Session 16
Panel: “Transnational Perspectives on Filipino Identities”
Linda Maram (California State University, USA): “Transnational Filipino Identities: ‘PacMan the Destroyer,’ Boxing
Narratives, and Virtual Communities.”
Theodore S. Gonzalves (University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA): “C.V. — The course of a life.”
Ruth M. Tindaan (University of the Philippines, Philippines): “Reconstructing the Igorot Identity in Vernacular Films
Produced in the Cordillera.”
Session 17
Panel: “Identities in Totalitarian Societies”
Mary Ann Dellinger (Virginia Military Institute, U.S.A): “From the Margins: The Construction of Antifascist Feminine Identity
in Francoist Spain.”
Ángel Galdón Rodríguez (Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha): “La destrucción de la identidad cultural en el totalitarismo
distópico.”
Anabela Valente Simôes (Universidade de Aveiro, Portugal): “‘It is not yet resolved’: Postmemories of the Third Reich.”
Session 18
Panel: “Media and the Inner World: Psycho-Cultural Approaches to Identity, Identification and Emotionality in Contemporary
Media”
Caroline Brainbridge (Roehampton University, UK): “Gunning for Ourselves: The Spectacle of Envy and Femininity in the
Press.”
Hugh Ortega Breton (Roehampton University, UK): “Fear as Identity Construct: The Paranoid Style in Spooks.”
Caroline Yates (University of East London, UK): “Media and the Inner World: Mapping the Psycho-Cultural Context and
Debates.”
9. Session 19
Panel: “Identity, Nationhood, Nationality” (I)
José María Aguilera Manzano (Universidad de Cantabria, Spain): “The Power of Literature in the Cuban Identity Process
of Construction.”
Rafael Costa (University of Coimbra, Portugal): “Cosmo-polis y Cosmopolitismo: criando y re-criando las identidades en el
mundo poscolonial.”
Brillian Mhlanga (University of Westminster, UK): “Towards a New Sociology of Ethnicity: Zimbabwe’s Nationalism and the
Paradox of Ethnicity.”
Session 20
Panel: “The Public and the Private: Power, Politics, and Identity”
Ana Clara Birrento (University of Évora, Portugal): “Acts of Mapping: A Cartography of the Self in the Political
Autobiography of Cavaco Silva.”
Annamari Huovinen (Aalto University School of Economics, Helsinki, Finland): “The professional identity of the Finnish
candidates in the European Parliament elections in the elections campaign 2009.”
María Helena Saianda and Olga Baptista Gonçalves (University of Évora, Portugal): “The Construction of the Self in the
World of Politics: the Case of José Sócrates.”
10:00-11:00 Plenary Lecture 2: “The Uses of British Identity.”
Dr. John Storey
University of Sunderland, UK
11:00-11:30 Coffee Break
11.30-13.00 – Parallel Sessions Session 21
Panel “Cultural Institutions and Identity Fabrication”
10. Caroline Donnellan (Boston University, British Programmes, London, UK): “Creating the Tate Identity.”
Agnes Aljas (University of Tartu, Estonia): “Participation as Possibility for New Identities. Cultural Heritage Institutions in
Online Environment.”
Branko Šuštar (Slovenian School Museum, Ljubljana, Slovenia): “Museum identities through the history of education:
Slovenian School Museum in Ljubljana.”
Session 22
Panel: “Identity and Moral Growth: The Dynamics of Gender in Colonial and Postcolonial Britain and America”
Silvia Castro Berrego (Universidad de Málaga, Spain): “Identity and Moral Growth in I Been in Sorrows Kitchen and Licked
out all the Pots.”
Inmaculada Pineda Hernández (Universidad de Málaga, Spain): “On Black Feminism and Contemporary African American
Women Playwrights: Shaping Identity through Violence.”
María Isabel Romero Ruiz (Universidad de Málaga, Spain): “Identity and Gender Policy: The London Lock Annual Reports,
1833-1837.”
Session 23
Panel: “Identity at the Early Stages of Life: Children’s and Youths’ Identification Processes”
Airi-Alina Allaste (Tallinn University, Estonia): “Drifting Perception of “Us”. How Young People Construct their Subcultural
Identities?”
Auba Llompart Pons (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain): “Reversing the Bildungsroman: Horror, Alienation and
the Child’s Solitary Quest for an Identity in Neil Gaiman’s Coralin.”
Dikmen Yakali-Camoglu (Dogus University, Istanbul, Turkey): “Characters from a Different Story: Narrative Identity and
Children's Magazines.”
11. Session 24
Panel: “Identity, Nationhood, Nationality” (II)
Roberto Del Valle (Saint Louis University, Madrid Campus, Spain): “The Importance of Community”: Exilic Identities and
Collective Loyalties in Raymond Williams’s Border Country.”
Violeta Cvetkovska Ocokoljic, Tatjana Cvetkovski and Ana Langovic Milicevic (Megatrend University, Belgrade,
Serbia): “Religion and Tradition: Renewal Cultural Identity in Serbia.”
Session 25
Panel: “The Public and the Private: Power, Politics, and Identity” (II)
Baris Çayli (Universita Di Camerino, Italy): “The Relationship between Power and Perception of Identity: The Case of the
Italian Mafioso.”
Michele Spanò (University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy): “Law as Subjectivation Technique: Reading Class Action with
Foucault.”
Cristina Georgiana Voicu (“Alexandru Ioan Cuza” University of Iaşi, Romania): “Individual and Collective Identities at the
Crossroads of Cultural Politics.”
13.00-14.30 – Parallel Sessions Session 26
Panel: “Asian-American Postcolonial Identities”
Sorina Ailiesei (“Alexandru Ioan Cuza” University of Iaşi, Romania): “Negotiating Boundaries of a Genre and of a Dual
Identity in Maxine Hong Kingston’s The Woman Warrior.”
Jerry A. Varsava (University of Alberta, Canada): “Asymmetries of Power: Identity and Voice in Ha Jin’s Fiction”
Session 27
Panel: “Jewish Diaspora and Identity”
Mª Jesús Fernández Gil (Universidad de Salamanca, Spain): “Remembering as a Means of Repairing Jews’ Damaged
Identity.”
12. Christopher L. Schilling (University of Hamburg, Germany): “Jewish Diaspora Identity and the State of Israel in the
International.”
Session 28
Panel: “Identities and the Media (I)”
Virginia Signorini (International University Institute for European Studies in Gorizia, Italy): “Refugees' Identity in the Italian
Anti-immigration Era.”
Jasper Vanderberghe (Hogeschool Gent, Belgium) and An Van de Casteele (Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Belgium): “Referent
Identification in Newspaper Discourse on the YPF Takeover by Repsol.”
Mauro Wilton de Sousa (University of São Paulo, Brazil): The Belonging to the Common Media Issues: The Identity in
Times of Transition.”
Session 29
Panel: “Identity and Body Politics”
Verónica Rodríguez Morales (University of Murcia, Spain): “Hysterizing’ 30 Years of AIDS: Identity of People Living with
HIV/AIDS (PLWHAS).”
Beth A. Butler (Muskingum University New Concord, USA): “La anorexia como crisis de identidad en la narrativa
española”.
Fernanda Roberta Daniel da Silva Portronieri and Alexandre Brasil Carvalho da Fonseca (UFRJ, Brazil):
“Construcción de la imagen corporal entre los jóvenes de una escuela primaria: una cuestión de identidad y diferencia.”
13. Session 30
Panel: “The Politics of Identity and the Muslim World”
Bakhta Abdelhay (University of Mostaganem, Algeria) “The Multifunctionality of Gendered Voice Styles and the
Construction of Stances and Identities in MTG community (Algeria).”
Kerem Karaosmanoğlu (Yildiz Technical University, Istanbul, Turkey): “Denationalising Identity: On Non-Muslim Minorities
in Urban Turkey.”
Melius Sülos (Bogazici University, Istanbul, Turkey): “Power, Memory and Identity: The Case of the Tenth Anniversary
Celebrations of the Turkish Republic.”
14.30-16.00 Break and Lunch
16.00-17.30 – Parallel sessions Session 31
Panel: “Identity and Minorities in Asia”
Yvonne M.Campbell and Wilfred Harding ak. Jiee (Centre for Language Studies, University Malaysia Sarawak & Ministry
of Education, Malaysia): “Language and Identity: Will The Real Bidayuh Please Stand Up?”
Ramesh Aroli (University of Hyderabad, India): “Identity and Identifications: “Inquiring the Construction of Kannada
Identity.”
Defne Karaosmanoğlu (Bahcesehir University, Turkey): “Food is Good to Re-Think: Complicating Identity Relations
through Food Studies.”
Session 32
Panel: “Identities in Historical Perspective” (I)
Lukasz Hudomięt (Adam Mickiewicz University, Poznań, Poland): “Between Discipline and Desire – The Construction of
Sexual Identity under the British Colonial Rule.”
Alev Karaduman Baysal (Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey): “The Identity of the Gentlewoman in the Eighteenth
Century English Novel: A Study in Cultural and Social Identification.”
Giovanna Guidicini (University of Edinburgh, UK): “Triumphal Entries, Royal Expectations and Local Awareness:
Representing Endangered Urban Identity in XVI Century Edinburgh.”
14. Session 33
Panel: “Identities and the Media (II)”
Ine Van Linthout (Erasmus University College, Brussels University Association, Belgium): “The Specific Role of Different
Media in Nazi-German Identity Construction.”
Thomas E. Ruggiero (University of the West of England, UK) and Kenneth C. C. Yang (University of Texas, USA):
“Cultural Pluralism, Ethnic Identity and Media Language Choice.”
Paola Bellomi (Università degli Studi di Verona, Italy): “Proceso de identificación y reconocimiento de la identidad: Las
estrategias mediáticas a través del ejemplo de la revista Triunfo.”
Session 34
Panel: “Race and Gender at the Cultural Crossroads”
Fatemeh Azizmohammadi and Mehdi Dehghani (IAU, Arak Branch, Iran): “Concepts of Identity in Alice Walker's The
Color Purple.”
Mhedi Afrougheh (IAU, Boroujerd Branch, Iran) and Dehghani Shahram (IAU, Arak Branch, Iran): ”Cultural Imperialism
and Identity in Alice Walker's Possessing the Secret of Joy.”
Shweta Kushal and Evangeline Manickam (Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, India): “Race: The Colour of
Belonging – A Comparative Analysis of Meera Syal’s Anita and Me and Ravinder Randhawa’s A Wicked Old Woman.”
Session 35
Panel: “Identity and Hegemonic Practices” (I)
Elina Skukina (University of Latvia, Latvia): “Identities in Latvian Picaresque Novel. Change of Identities in Latvian
Picaresque Novel.”
Juan José Varela Tembra (Instituto Teológico Compostelano, Spain): “Fading away into the Future: Reconsidering Adult –
child Relationship in a Discourse of Affect.”
Merja De Mattos Parreira (University of Algarbe, Portugal): “Hegemonies of Expatriate Identities in Portuguese English-
language Press.”
15. 17.30-18.00 Break
18.00-20.00 Parallel sessions Session 36
Panel: “Mirrors, Memories and Reconstructions: Postmodern Identities”
Gabriela Burcea (Universidad de Salamanca, Spain): “Memory as Means of Shaping Identity in Salman Rushdie’s Grimus.”
Adriana Yankelevich Kiczkowski (UNED, Spain): “Identidades y nuevo terrorismo en Falling Man de Don DeLillo.”
Raquel Farrugia (Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Spain): “Thresholds and Mirrors: Identity and Alterity in Philip
Pullman' s The Subtle Knife.”
Daniela Oancea (University of Bucharest, Romania): “Memory and Identity in Evermore by Julian Barnes.”
Session 37
Panel: “Identities in Historical Perspective” (II)
Mark Cronlund Anderson (University of Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada): “American Identity, the Frontier Myth, and
September 11.”
Sylvia Mittler (University of Toronto, Scarborough, Canada): “Identity at the Crossroads: Popular Historiography,
Alternative Cultural Memory and Greek Humorist Nikos Tsiforos.”
Himmet Umunc (Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey): “’Malignant and Turban’d:’ The European Constructs of the
Turkish Identity in the Early Modern Times and Their Polarizations in Shakespeare.”
th
Mª Eugenia Sánchez Suárez (UNED, Spain): “‘A Chicken of a Gentleman, and a Tiger of a Lady’: The 18 Century
Heroine´s Forgotten Strength and Resourcefulness.”
16. Session 38
Panel: “Imagining Identity: Fantasy, Reality and Resistance”
Pollyanna Ruiz (University of Sussex, UK): “Revealing Power: Masked Protest and the Blank Figure.”
Horacio Legras (University of California-Irvine, USA): “Fantasy and Ideology in the Study of Revolutions.”
Eduardo Barros Grela (Universidade da Coruña, Spain): “Hallucinatory Topographies as Modes of Identity Production in
Robert Stone´s Dog Soldiers.”
Janani Subramanian (University of Southern California, USA): The Fantastic Mise-en-Scene of Racial Identity
Session 39
Panel: “Femininities in Art and Fiction” (I)
Beatriz González Moreno (Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Spain): “Multifaceted Female Representations in Mary
Shelley's Tales.”
Carme Farré (Universitat de Lleida, Spain): “The Identity of the Woman Detective in Feminist Detective Fiction: The Case of
Cornwell’s Scarpetta.”
Salvador Faura Sabé (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelaona, Spain): “The Postcolonial Coming of Age of Catalan
Literature: Najat El Hachmi and her Search for an Identity in L’últim patriarca (2008).”
Mar Ramón Torrijos (Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Spain): “The Construction of Female Identity in Popular Culture:
Bridget Jones’s Postfeminism.”
Session 40
Panel: “Identities in Postcolonial Britain” (I)
Dina Fedorova (Institute of History and Archaeology, Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Science, Ekaterinburg,
Russia): “Little England or Multucultural Britain? Postimperialism, Globalization and National Identity Crisis.”
Justyna Stępień (University of Lodz, Poland): “Pop Culture Identity Visualized in Selected Works by British Pop Artists.”
Laura Torrado Mariñas (Universidade de Vigo, Spain): “The Ties that Bond, the Bonds that Break: The Joy Luck Club as a
Cross-cultural Examination of the Diasporic Identity.”
17. Anna Tomczak (University of Białystok, Poland): “A Fantasy of Incorporation: Identity in Gautam Malkani’s Novel
Londonstani.”
20.00-21.00 Break
21.00-24.00 Social Programme: Visit to Almagro and Institutional Dinner
18. Saturday, 24th April
08.30-10.00 – Parallel Sessions Session 41
Panel: “Identity, Nationhood, Nationality”
Mª Luz Arroyo Vázquez (UNED, Spain): “Leadership and Activism of Coretta Scott King: from Behind Scenes to the
Forefront.”
Antonia Sagrado (UNED, Spain): “La construcción de la identidad irlandesa en la cultura estadounidense”.
Bruno Camús Bergareche and Sara Gómez Seibane (Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Spain): “Identidad en crisis: País
Vasco 1876.”
Session 42
Panel: “Performing Identities”
Lilian Agwu (University of Ibadan, Nigeria): “Image and Re imaging: The Negotiated Self in Caribbean Postcolonial Drama.”
Wendy Holland (University of Western Sydney, Australia): “The circus as a space for negotiating identities and processes of
identification in Australia.”
Philipp Schulte (Justus-Liebig-University, Giessen, Germany): “Private Posing: Fragile Identities and Excentric Self-
celebration on the Post-dramatic Stage.”
19. Session 43
Panel: “Identities on the Big Screen: Ethnic Perspectives”
Mahdis Azarmandi: “Transnational Cinema – Moving towards the Representation of Hybrid Cosmopolitan Identities.”
Elena Oliete (University of Zaragoza, Spain): “Slumdog Millionaire (Boyle, 2008): Identifying National Identities in a
Transnational Film.”
Guillermo Iglesias Díaz (University of Vigo, Spain): “Fiction Narrative and National Identity: Re-Writing History in Galicia
through Film with a Carpenter Pencil.”
Session 44
Panel: “Femininities in Art and Fiction (II)”
Pilar Muñoz López (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain): “La indagación de la identidad: mujeres artistas en el arte.”
Sara Bigardi (University of Barcelona, Spain): “María Zambrano: más allá de las contradicciones, al sentir originario.”
Session 45
Panel: “Identities in Postcolonial Britain (II)”
Mª José Coperías Aguilar (University of Valencia, Spain): “The Changing Identity of British Broadsheets.”
Betsabé Navarro Romero (Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, Spain): “Life in the UK: a user’s manual?”
10:00-11:00 Plenary Lecture 3: “Identity and Belonging: Cultural Political Responses to 7/7 in the UK.”
Dr. Chris Weedon
Cardiff University, UK
11:00-11:30 Coffee Break
20. 11.30-13.00 – Parallel Sessions Session 46
Panel: “Más allá de la ‘Unidad en la Diversidad’ Conflicto e identidades desplazadas en la India contemporánea.”
Carlos Garrido Castellano (Universidad de de Granada, Spain): “Después de la unidad en la diversidad. Identidad, nación y
arte indio contemporáneo”.
Virginia Nieto-Sandoval Millán (Universidad Antonio de Nebrija): “Arte e identidad nacional en la India contemporánea. Del
renaciendo bengalí a la Escuela de Baroda.”
Teresa Segura García (Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain): “Recasting Hinduism: Modernity, Religion and Social Reform in
Interwar Princely India.”
Session 47
Panel: “Towars a Multiplication of Identities in Contemporary Spain”
Félix Díaz (University of Castilla-La Mancha, Spain): “Institutional Ethnography and Membership Categorization Analysis on
the gypsy side of social life.”
Doreen O’Connor Gomez (Whittier College, Whittier, CA, USA): “Un asesino sobre el escenario: Skinheads on the Spanish
Stage.”
Anindya Raychaudhuri (Cardiff University, UK): “Tracing Identities, Identifying Traces: Memory and Identity in Contemporary
Spain.”
Session 48
Panel: “Identities on the Big Screen: Gender Perspectives”
Chantal Cornut-Gentille D’Arcy (University of Zaragoza, Spain): “Parading flesh and flab? A Critical Reflection on the
Socially-constructed Nature of Gender Identity in The Full Monty (Peter Cattaneo, 1997) and Calendar Girls (Nigel Cole,
2003).”
Sara Martín Alegre (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain): “Masculinity in Despair: Dan White in Gus Van Sant’s Milk
(2008) and Rob Epstein’s The Times of Harvey Milk (1984).”
David Muldoon (University Autònoma Barcelona, Spain): “Johnny Cash’s silenced Masculinity in the Biopic Walk The Line.”
21. Session 49
Panel: “Femininities in Art and Fiction (III)”
Esther Zaplana (University of Castilla-La Mancha, Spain):
Patricia Martín Matas (San Jorge University, Spain): “Re-Reading Angela Carter’s The Snow Child from a post-colonial point
of view.”
Juan A. Tarancón (University of Zaragoza, Spain): “So Healthy in Her Body and Her Mind”: Juno and the Antisexual
Revolution.”
Session 50
Panel: “Local Identities in the Global Era”
Felicity Hand (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain): “Forging an Identity through Popular Culture: Seggae in
Mauritius.”
Mª Rosario Piqueras Fraile (Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain): “La identidad sureña a través de la obra de Joel
Chandler Harris.”
Dina Fedorova (Institute of History and Archaeology, Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Science, Ekaterinburg,
Russia): “Visual Anthropological Aspects of Identity Studies.”
13.00-14.00 IBACS Meeting
14.00-14.30 Conference Closes