The American Folklore Society (AFS) will hold its annual meeting this week (Oct. 12-15) at Indiana University Bloomington, hosted by IU's highly respected Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology.
AFS chose as its meeting's theme "Peace, War, Folklore" to coincide with Themester 2012, "Making War, Making Peace." The organization has partnered with the IU College of Arts and Sciences and other groups to open several conference events to the public.
More than 700 folklorists from around the world -- including many IU alumni -- are expected to attend and exchange work and ideas, and create and strengthen friendships and working relationships.
"AFS meetings have almost always been held in larger cities, so it is extremely rare for a university to be selected as conference host," said John McDowell, chair of the IU Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology. "It is a testament to IU's importance within the discipline of folklore studies that the Bloomington campus was chosen for this honor."
While registration is required to participate in the meeting, several pre-conference and conference events will be open to the public. Unless otherwise indicated, the events are free. They will include:
The Branigin Lecture, "From Blood Feuds to Peace: Traditional Dispute Resolution Mechanisms in Ethiopia," by Fekade Azeze, a folklorist and associate professor of Ethiopian literature and folklore and coordinator of the graduate program at Haile Selassie I University, in Addis Adeba, Ethiopia. It will begin at 3 p.m. Tuesday (Oct. 11) at the Folklore and Ethnomusicology Auditorium, 800 N. Indiana Ave.
"Quilts and Human Rights," an exhibit at the Mathers Museum of World Cultures/Glenn A. Black Laboratory of Archaeology, 416 N. Indiana Ave. The exhibit, curated by Marsha MacDowell, a professor of art and art history and museum curator at Michigan State University, examines the ways in which textiles -- especially quilts -- have been used to demonstrate solidarity with movements dedicated to advancing international human rights, mark important events related to human rights violations and pay tribute to those who have played crucial roles. MacDowell will speak there at 5:30 p.m. on Oct. 27 on the topic, "Piecing Peace: Quilts as Visual Discourse of Conflict, Reconciliation, and Memory.""Folklore in Jerusalem Between War and (no) Peace: The Jerusalem Project 1991-2011," from 1:30-4:30 p.m. on Oct. 12 at the Mathers Museum. Israeli, Palestinian, and U.S. scholars will address the terms of engagement that emerge and diverge in the occupied/disputed/contested city of Jerusalem. In light of the recent human rights violations against Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem neighborhoods. They will discuss boundaries and border crossings between political activism and academic research as well as the prospects and pitfalls of scholarly "dialogue" projects that engage across Israeli and Palestinian lines in the city.
Henry Glassie, IU College Professor Emeritus of Folklore, will deliver the AFS plenary address,A number of the meeting sessions, including all the plenary addresses, will be available for viewing live online and will be archived and available after the meeting. More information is available at the AFS members' blog at http://www.afsnet.org/members/blog_view.asp?id=592230.
Information about the conference and registration is available at the AFS web site at http://www.afsnet.org/. Additional information about the meeting and Themester is available at http://themester.indiana.edu/events/folklore.shtml.
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