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        The Faculty of English Language and Literature,
        National and Kapodistrian University of Athens in collaboration with
        the Hellenic Association for American Studies (HELAAS)

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Organizing committee
 
Dr. Theodora Tsimpouki, Professor, Dr. Konstantinos Blatanis, Assistant Professor
Dr. Angeliki Tseti, Adjunct Lecturer
 
Faculty of English Language and Literature, University of Athens

Keynote Speakers

Philip John Davies

Post-2020 Vision:

"I will be an ally of the light, not the darkness," Joe Biden, 20th August 2020.

"I’m the only thing standing between the American dream and total anarchy, madness and chaos," Donald Trump, 21st August 2020.

The Alternative Universes of Future US Election Campaigns

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Rita Charon & Catherine Rogers

Narrative Medicine: An American Method Going Global

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Kostas Ioannidis & Eleni Mouzakiti

Studying America (photographically): From Walker Evans to Doug Rickard

Call for Papers
submission deadline  October 31, 2021

There is a shared sense among a large majority of historians, philosophers, critics and artists that we are now living in a new global moment: our contemporary era may or may not have started with the fall of the Berlin Wall, in 1989; may or may not have established itself in the wake of the 9/11 attacks; but it is painfully clear that, in the new millennium, a new debate on the "post-postmodern" has opened up. If the Jamesonian taxonomy no longer has the same explanatory power, what is the new dominant cultural logic of post-postmodernism? If, to quote Jameson again, postmodernism was a “radical break or coupure” with modernism, which is post-postmodernism’s cultural imaginary, its strategies and features? However early it may be to describe the nature of post-postmodernism, we can discern three loosely bounded interpenetrating strands: some scholars recognize a heightened degree of intensity and mutation of tendencies and techniques already present in postmodernism, others see a renewed engagement with history and a return to realism. Still, there are those thinkers who have observed a decisive break with the postmodern period and have struggled to mark its contours in the new socioeconomic order, a notable feature of which is the shift or questioning of theparadigm of the American global hegemony. Nevertheless, complicating the study of the cultural shifts that are underway in our current condition is the abundance of terms and tendencies that proclaim to be postmodernism’s successors. The conference “After post-modernism: American Studies in the 21st century” takes as a point of departure the words of Ben Lerner’s narrator, that “the world [is] rearranging itself” (10.04) and invites both panels and papers that address fresh and original questions relevantto studying the post-postmodern condition. It seeks to investigate questions about changing literary patterns, innovative/shifting cultural practices, and new trends that have risen in the first two decades of the twenty-first century or, to put it simply, what comes after postmodernism.

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