|
Call for Proposals
European Studies and the International Studies
Curriculum
April 2-3, 2004
Slippery Rock University
Slippery Rock, PA
Panels or individual presentations are invited from all
disciplines on topics related to teaching the New Europe, and /or
the place of Europe in view of changes occurring as a result of the
formation of the European Union. Suggested topics or questions
include but are not limited to the following:
- How has the historical evolution of the idea of Europe impacted
upon cultures and nations?
- How have the music and literature of Europe shaped the
development of a European Identity?
- What is the role of European thought and continental philosophy
in the cultures of Europe and beyond?
- How can the choice to form a European Economic Union create
European community or identity?
- How can the choice to form a European Economic Union create
European community or identity?
- How do the concepts of identity and rights themselves,
referring equally to persons, cultures, subcultures, and nations,
allow or thwart enduring European social cooperation?
- What is the relationship between the social division of labor
and the myth of assimilation and social mobility across national
borders?
- What has been the effect of transnational migration as a result
of wartime dislocation and political upheaval on the continuity of
cultures and the possibility of a new Europe?
- What have been the consequences for European identity and
culture of the unification of Germany and the fragmentation of the
Soviet Union?
- How can the richness of national culture-the givens of its
ethnic, linguistic, and aesthetic heritage-be fostered in the face
of economic union?
- How do the concepts of race and ethnicity differ in the
rhetoric of American individual or equal rights and the more
prevalent concept in Europe of human rights?
- How can the ethos of self or modernity be modulated to allow
for the context of others in a new Europe that understands its past
and looks to future?
The conference at SRU will include a workshop on "Teaching
the European Union: approaches and Resources" conducted by
staff members of the University of Pittsburgh Center for the
European Union.
|