Conference on Democratic Violence in Latin America
Registration
Details
While dominant political theories posit that democracies advance peaceful governance, violence shapes political life in many Latin American countries. Sometimes construed as an exception or an original sin to democratic rule, violence continues to make democracies in the region less equal. This “democratic violence” undermines political participation and solidarity, setting the conditions for its reproduction.
The University of South Florida’s Conference on Democratic Violence in Latin America explores this paradox, searching for alternative approaches toward democratic cultures from various disciplinary perspectives. We invite extended paper abstracts or creative writing submissions, thematic panels of 3-4 participants, prearranged by submitters, and panel performances.
December 1, 2024: Deadline for abstract submissions
Submissions and more information: usf.to/CDVLA
For more information, please contact: CAS-CDVLA@usf.edu
File Attachments: Call_for_Papers_Conference_on_Democratic_Violence_in_Latin_America_Spring_2025
Where
Marshall Student Center 3rd Floor
4103 Cedar Circle, Tampa 33620, United States
Speakers
Nathalie Batraville
Associate Professor
Concordia University
Nathalie Batraville is an associate professor at Concordia University’s Simone de Beauvoir Institute, where she teaches in the areas of Black feminisms, queer theory, and prison abolition. A scholar and artist, her work seeks to generate and illuminate frameworks that challenge both state violence and interpersonal violence. Her scholarship has appeared in scholarly publications such as Small Axe, The Journal of Haitian Studies, The CLR James Journal, TOPIA: Canadian Journal of Cultural Studies, and Tangence. Her first book, Disrupting Agency: Towards a Black Feminist Anarchism, is forthcoming with Duke University Press. In it, she rethinks abolitionist frameworks from a Black feminist anarchist perspective. Through her ceramic art practice, she explores storytelling, plant life, desire, and rebellion.
Ralph Cintrón
University of Illinois Chicago
Ralph Cintrón is professor emeritus of English and Latin American and Latino Studies and Senior Researcher at the Great Cities Institute at the University of Illinois at Chicago. During COVID he was LALS’s interim director. He is a former Rockefeller Foundation Fellow, Fulbright Scholar, honorable mention winner for the Victor Turner Prize in Ethnographic Writing from the American Anthropological Association, and a Fellow of the Rhetoric Society of America. He is the author of Angels’ Town: Chero Ways, Gang Life, and Rhetorics of the Everyday as well as Democracy as Fetish. He is also the co-editor of Culture, Catastrophe + Rhetoric and Co-Pi of 60 Years of Migration: Puerto Ricans in Chicagoland. He is currently writing with a philosopher Natures and Their Cosmologies, a text about planetary heating inside modernity’s political economy. In conjunction with this last project he is working with climate scientists on a $25 million grant funded through the Department of Energy to Argonne National Laboratory and UIC, and a $2 million grant funded by Mellon, Crossing Latinidades, which is working with Latino Studies programs at UC Irvine, UT Arlington, and UIC to map the experiences of local Latino communities under climate change.
Stacey Sowards
The University of Texas at Austin
Dr. Stacey Sowards teaches courses in communication theory, rhetorical theory, environmental communication, gender and communication, and intercultural communication. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Kansas in 2001. Her research focuses on environmental, intercultural, and gender and communication in Latin America, Southeast Asia, and the United States. Her dissertation was a study of environmental organizations in Kalimantan, Indonesia, and was funded by a J. William Fulbright grant in 2000-2001. In 2005, she received a Fulbright-Hays grant for further study in Indonesia. She speaks both Spanish and Indonesian. Her work in communication and rhetoric has been published as book chapters and journal articles. Other research projects focus on cultural and gender representations, and appear in journals such as Argumentation and Advocacy, Communication Studies, Philosophy and Rhetoric, and Communication Theory. Her book, on Dolores Huerta and the United Farm Workers, was published in 2019 with The University of Texas Press.Dr. Stacey K. Sowards served the department chair and a full professor in the department of communication and research fellow in the Sam Donaldson Center at the University of Texas at El Paso for many years before joining the Department of Communication Studies at The University of Texas at Austin.
Celeste Wagner
Rutgers University
María Celeste Wagner is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Journalism and Media Studies at Rutgers University’s School of Communication and Information. She holds a Ph.D. and M.A. in Communication from the University of Pennsylvania (2022; 2018), and a Licenciatura (B.A.) in Communication from Universidad de San Andrés, Argentina, her home country. Celeste’s research focuses on media reception and influence surrounding social and political issues, particularly gender inequalities in the Americas. Methodologically, her work includes individual and group interviews, surveys, experiments, and comparative analysis. Her dissertation has been honored with four awards from the International Communication Association and the National Communication Association. Her research has been published in the Journal of Communication, Digital Journalism, International Journal of Communication, Media, Culture & Society, Journalism, Latin American Perspectives, among others.