IIUI mission is to transform the society by promoting education, training, research, technology, and collaboration for reconstruction of human thought in all its forms on the foundations of Islam.
The Second IIUI-UNCW International Conference: “Local Cities, Foreign Capitals: Finding the Local Anchor in the Global Cultures” October 9th-11th, 2017 Islamabad, Pakistan
The International Islamic University Islamabad’s Departments of English, and Politics & IR are proud to partner with the University of North Carolina Wilmington to present the second in a series of international conferences. “Local Cities, Foreign Capitals: Finding the Local Anchor in the Global Cultures” will be hosted in Pakistan’s beautiful capital city, Islamabad.
The conference schedule will focus on picking out and pecking at the traces of the valuable local from a growing mass of the global. The emergence of new intra- and inter-capital contours in imagined and existent metros calls for measuring and mapping the cultural landscapes in the geography of centrality and marginality. The conference will invite us to see that globalization is not only constituted in terms of capital and the new international corporate culture (e.g., international finance, telecommunications, information flows), but also in terms of people and non-corporate cultures. The new global cities are landscapes where multiplicities of globalization processes assume concrete, localized forms. We can then think of new global capitals as strategic spaces for whole series of conflicts and contradictions.
Contributions will explore the myriad and seminal forms of impact that globalization has had and continues to exert on the many facets of religion, politics, society and culture in the world.
For this conference, we sought proposals from all disciplines for single papers and poster presentations that cross, blur, defy, and redefine disciplinary boundaries within the globalization studies, global translations of national and regional cultures and subcultures, and employ creative interdisciplinary methods and perspectives to examine contemporary debates on globalization and localization.
Contributions will address these and other related issues from a variety of perspectives, both theoretical and empirical.
Globalization, Internationalization and Localization
Globalization and Cultural Heterogeneity
Local and Global as Binary and Blend
G(o)local: Re-routing the Refugees
G(o)local: Rebooting the Repellent Nationalistic Boundaries
Firsting Spaces: From Musharaf’s ‘Pakistan First’ to Trump’s ‘America First’
Fluidity and Hybridity
Acculturation, Identity, Race Relations
Culture, Identity & Mobility
Diaspora Studies
Religious Identities and Politics of Religion
Media, Technology, and Society
Pop Culture, E.G. Film, Music, Video Games, Comics, Art, Performance, etc.
Terrorism and Politics
Place and Environment
Tourism in Practice
Imperialism / Decolonization
The State of Post-Coloniality in the US and Pakistan
Issues of Modernity and Technology with Focus on Muslim Populations
Varieties of Capitalism / Socialism
Performing Globalization
Globalization, Post-Colonial &Diaspora Studies
Nations/Translations
The Confrontation with Neoliberalism
Social Media, Digital Network and Globalization
World Literature, Translated Texts, Popular Texts, etc.
Global Politics and Censorship, especially Concerning South Asia
National Identity and Diversity
Pakistani English Vis-À-Vis American and Other Varieties