The 21st annual conference
of the
New Zealand
Studies Association (NZSA),
together with
the Institute for Social
and Cultural
Anthropology, University of Vienna,
supported by
the University of South Australia
Vienna, Austria, 1-4
July 2015
A 4-day
international conference,
with a
reception at the Natural History Museum,
boat trip on
the Danube, and conference dinner at the
Kunst Haus
Wien, the Hundertwasser Museum.
The conference
venue is the University of Vienna,
located in the
centre and very close to the city's museum district.
Keynotes:
Professor
Dominic Alessio
Associate
Professor Leonard Bell
Sia
Figiel
Associate
Professor Sei Kosugi
Professor Matt
Matsuda
Professor
Hermann Mueckler
Associate
Professor Susan Najita
Professor Erik
Olssen, ONZM
Dr Max Quanchi
Professor Eva
Rueschmann
Professor Paul
Tapsell
The New Zealand
Studies Association has a long and strong history in promoting New Zealand
Studies, which now extends within the region through its twice-yearly Journal
of New Zealand and Pacific Studies. Building on the successes of the
conferences in Oslo (2014), Nijmegen (2013), Gdansk (2012), Frankfurt (2009),
Florence (2008), London (2007), and Paris (2006), this major event will be held
at the University of Vienna.
Proposals for 20
minute papers to be sent by 11 January to Associate Professor Ian Conrich (ian@ianconrich.co.uk). Papers can consider all themes
within any of the following strands [1] Empires of the Pacific, to include
German, French, British, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, Japanese, American and New
Zealand empire building [2] The Pacific Ocean and Pacific Island States [3]
Polynesia and Pasifika [4] New Zealand culture [5] New Zealand as a Pacific
nation [6] Maori culture [7] Ocean and coastal cultures. Definitions
within these parameters are broad. The conference fee will include annual
membership to the NZSA, which for 2015 includes a twice-yearly
journal. A selection of papers from the conference will be published in the
refereed Journal of New Zealand and Pacific Studies, published by
Intellect.
The conference
will accept proposals on a range of subjects including the following: literature,
history, film, music, art, cultural studies, sociology, geography, tourism, war
studies, politics, international relations, identity and multiculturalism,
anthropology, Maori Studies, Pacific Studies, archaeology and museum studies.
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