Framing the penal colony
22-23 November 2019
Whether presented as a tabula rasa onto which all the hopes,
desires, pathologies and detritus of Empire might be projected, as a brilliant
story of nation-state building via a hearty mix of backbreaking labour and
genocide, or as an abandoned scarred landscape of failed utopian dreams, the
penal colony is a space as much imagined as real.
This conference will explore
historical and contemporary representations of the penal colony as
philosophical concept, political project and geographical imaginary. While
direct challenges to existing historiographies are anticipated, the intention
is to consider the role of visual culture, maps, photography, cinema, graphic
novels/comics, museums in 'framing' the penal colony alongside literature,
philosophy, politics. If the penal colony is generally considered to belong to
the past, its legacy remains in the form of the prison islands and convict
labour camps still operative across the globe. What can historical and
contemporary representations of the penal colony tell us about its continuing
legacy and what opportunities do such representations offer for thinking
critically and creatively about our own ‘carceral’ present?
We welcome proposals for papers or panels. Please send
250-word abstracts and a short bio to sophie.fuggle@ntu.ac.uk by 30 June
2019.
The conference is funded by the AHRC as part of the ‘Postcards
from the bagne’ project and will be held at the National Justice Museum in
Nottingham, UK. The project blog can be visited here.
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