Post by junior on Nov 12, 2011 9:45:33 GMT -5
Fellowships: Mellon Sawyer Postdoctoral Fellow"Indigenous Cosmopolitics: Dialogues About the Reconstitution of Worlds" The Anthropology Department at UC Davis will appoint an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow for the 2012-2013 academic year. The Fellow will be involved in the scholarly activities of the Sawyer Seminar, "Indigenous Cosmopolitics: Dialogues About the Reconstitution of Worlds" that will unfold during that academic year. The seminar has as its goal to convene an interdisciplinary and international group of scholars to discuss the innovative possibilities, for scholarship and politics, that might emerge at the crossroads of two major processes-- indigenous social movements and the conceptual production generated by ethnographic studies of science and technology. While taking place in radically different social contexts and geographical regions, currently these two processes offer seemingly coincidental conceptual-political proposals: they interrogate the nature-culture divide in a manner that, if addressed and made public, could have far reaching implications as they question a number of correlated divides: mind body, subject, object, representer, represented, historical-ahistorical, among others. While these concepts continue to carry historical and political import, the epistemic critique leveled jointly by indigenous and scholarly claims also renders them insufficient to grasp events that (as we can acknowledge after such critique) occur outside the purview of the divide between nature and culture that organizes hegemonic knowledge.The fellow will help organize and participate in seminar events (including workshops, public lectures and reading groups) and design and teach a one quarter-long/ten weeks introductory undergraduate course on the topic. The appointment will be from August 1, 2012 to June 30, 2013. Stipend is $50,000. Eligibility: Candidates must have earned the doctoral degree no earlier than January 2009 and no later than July 2012. We welcome applicants from anthropology, geography, cultural studies, environmental studies, history, critical law, literature, philosophy, sociology, science and technology studies, and various interdisciplinary combinations. We seek creativity and encourage applications by scholars working on the themes of conceptual relevance to the seminar. Topics may include: politics and state/non-state formations, cultures of history, law and property, political ecologies/economies/ontologies, death and life, new materialisms, embodiment and nature-culture assemblages. A focus on indigeneity is preferred but not exclusive. There is no citizenship requirement or restriction for this fellowship. Non-U.S. nationals are welcome to apply.