In this paper, five authors account for the rethinking of a conference as a series of postcards, letters, rules and silent moments so that traditional hierarchies of knowledge could be overturned or, at least, sidelined. We recount how the place we convened was enlisted as an actor and the dramas and devices we applied to encounter it. We use this accounting to problematize the conventional practices of goal-oriented meetings and co-authored papers as forms of academic meaning-making. In finding a meeting point where expertise was disorientated and status undressed, we were able to investigate the idea of co-being between human and nonhuman realities as the step social theory needs to take to become a point of connection with the social wor...
As transnational extractivism, neo-fascist politics, and economies of abandonment and disposability ...
This paper attempts to reconfigure hegemonic framings of ‘the academic conference’ and thereby offer...
Conferences have been discussed as spaces for academic work to extend beyond the confines of one’s i...
In this paper, five authors account for the rethinking of a conference as a series of postcards, let...
In this paper, five authors account for the rethinking of a conference as a series of postcards, let...
In this paper, five authors account for the rethinking of a conference as a series of postcards, let...
Since their invention, picture postcards have played a key role in circulating racist and imperial i...
Our paper shares our collective endeavour as four doctoral and early career researchers who are tran...
The editorial discusses the impacts of the global pandemic to human agency, through the authors self...
This group responded to the challenge in part with a conceptual piece of creative writing–a “confere...
(...) Since then, the academic world has undergone some radical changes, and the process is not near...
Anthropologists like Victor Turner and Edward Bruner focus their attention on the experience of expe...
While there are multiple approaches to researching cultural events, predominant academic frames tend...
Reflecting on a range of qualitative research studies, this presentation considers the ways in which...
The practice of thoughtful conference design helps to preserve the research conference as a vital ar...
As transnational extractivism, neo-fascist politics, and economies of abandonment and disposability ...
This paper attempts to reconfigure hegemonic framings of ‘the academic conference’ and thereby offer...
Conferences have been discussed as spaces for academic work to extend beyond the confines of one’s i...
In this paper, five authors account for the rethinking of a conference as a series of postcards, let...
In this paper, five authors account for the rethinking of a conference as a series of postcards, let...
In this paper, five authors account for the rethinking of a conference as a series of postcards, let...
Since their invention, picture postcards have played a key role in circulating racist and imperial i...
Our paper shares our collective endeavour as four doctoral and early career researchers who are tran...
The editorial discusses the impacts of the global pandemic to human agency, through the authors self...
This group responded to the challenge in part with a conceptual piece of creative writing–a “confere...
(...) Since then, the academic world has undergone some radical changes, and the process is not near...
Anthropologists like Victor Turner and Edward Bruner focus their attention on the experience of expe...
While there are multiple approaches to researching cultural events, predominant academic frames tend...
Reflecting on a range of qualitative research studies, this presentation considers the ways in which...
The practice of thoughtful conference design helps to preserve the research conference as a vital ar...
As transnational extractivism, neo-fascist politics, and economies of abandonment and disposability ...
This paper attempts to reconfigure hegemonic framings of ‘the academic conference’ and thereby offer...
Conferences have been discussed as spaces for academic work to extend beyond the confines of one’s i...