Events at the Centre for Research on Language and Culture Contact

2nd CRLCC International Conference

14th Annual Glendon Graduate Student Conference in Translation Studies

The Centre for Research on Language and Culture Contact (CRLCC) at Glendon College is pleased to announce the 2025 Spring Research Week, taking place from May 6-10, 2025, at Glendon College, York University, in Toronto

The Spring Research Week will feature three distinct but related events: 

  1. Spring Research Seminar Archives, Language, and Translation, May 6-9, 2025
  2. 2nd CRLCC International Conference Contact and Engagement: Languages, Cultures and Knowledges, May 9-10, 2025
  3. 14th Graduate Student Conference in Translation Studies that will be part of the main conference (May 9-10, 2025)

We invite researchers, scholars, artists, and graduate students to participate in this week-long series of events dedicated to exploring a wide range of topics related to language, culture and knowledge contacts and exchanges. For further information on the two conferences, please contact the Organizing Committee at crlccconference2025@gmail.com.

2nd CRLCC International Conference

Date: May 9-10 , 2025
Location: Glendon College, York University (Toronto)

The Center for Language and Culture Contact (CRLCC) at Glendon College will soon be approaching its 20th anniversary. To mark the occasion, an international conference will be held on May 9-10, 2025, on topics related to language, culture, and knowledge contact in the 21st century.

Contact is a rich, multipronged concept. It can be linked to travel, migration, communication, translation, trade and exchange, cooperation, and solidarity, among other experiences and forms of relation. It can happen synchronically within specific spaces (multicultural societies, global cities, organizations or workplaces, multilingual classrooms, networks, airports, chatrooms, etc.) or diachronically, as seen historically in processes such as colonization and globalization. Whether physical or virtual, contact inherently entails movement and non-fixity.

While cultural contact has the potential to bring people together, foster mutual understanding and tolerance, and facilitate the exchange of ideas for innovation and change, it can also be prompted by force and lead to violence and oppression. The impact and effects of contact, therefore, hinge on various factors, including power dynamics between individuals and groups, the level of cultural awareness, and the willingness to engage in dialogue and cooperation.

From postcolonial and migration perspectives, the intensification of intercultural contacts has given rise to new and highly dynamic spaces, encompassing geographical, cultural, linguistic, cognitive, and epistemological dimensions. Related to other concepts such as the “third space”, coined by Homi Bhabha, the “contact zone”, by Mary Louise Pratt, or the “translation zone”, by Emily Apter, these spaces are often friction-driven (Tsing) and may entail potential risks, such as engulfment and effacement, or prove beneficial through processes like hybridization and cross-fertilization. 

In recent years, the transnational turn, fueled by a critique of globalization that relies on the apparent fluidity of spatial mobility and the supposed efficiency of global interconnection, has drawn attention to the forms of contact and interaction that occur in complex, unstructured, unpredictable and even chaotic contexts, leading to the production and emergence of new forms of culture and identity. This shift has led to the realization that “modern and globalized experiences of (re)attachment, multiple belongings, belonging-at-a-distance, supranational agreements, diaspora cultures, and global cities reveal the limitations of the national optic for characterizing twenty-first century ways of life” (Mattea Cussel, 4). As pointed out by Naoki Sakai, the traditional way of understanding international and intercultural dynamics, which relies on contrasting and juxtaposing spaces, cultures, and languages, is no longer as applicable or relevant in the contemporary world. Additionally, the binary logic used to frame concepts, such as colonized vs. colonizer, migrant vs. host society, North vs. South, mother tongue vs. foreign language, and so on, is also losing relevance. Thus, to fully understand the experiences of culture, language and identity in today’s interconnected world, it is crucial to move away from dichotomies to a more nuanced and complex way of thinking. In this conference, we aim to engage with the concept of contact and its various forms, centering on this shift from international relations to transnational dynamics, and from binary logic to complex and multidimensional thinking.

We welcome submissions on the theme of language, culture, and knowledge contact and engagement. We encourage exploration of the interconnections between these areas of research from various perspectives. Topics may include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Conceptual extension of the notion of contact: connection, interaction, exchange, encounter, event, relation, entanglement, node, cluster, etc.
  • Spatial representations and visualizations of contact: lines, thresholds, edges, boundaries, borders, zones of in-betweenness and transit, etc.
  • Outcomes of contact: fusion, hybridization, engulfment, effacement, trace, assimilation, adaptation, appropriation, sedimentation, friction, traction, stitching
  • Competing identities and allegiances in multilingual and multicultural contexts
  • Subjectivity in contact: heterodox (Pratt), hyphenated or nomadic (Braidotti)
  • Contact and the role of neutral intermediaries, gatekeepers, facilitators and intercultural mediators
  • Travel and traffic of theories, ideas, and knowledges across geographical, disciplinary, theoretical and discursive boundaries  
  • Contact, hierarchy and power dynamics in the 21st century
  • Literary, narrative, translational and discursive practices resulting from transnational and translingual writing
  • World literature versus national, migrant, diasporic or postcolonial literature
  • Representations of contact in literature, cinema and visual arts
  • Translation and interpreting understood as contact
  • Editorial and institutional management of linguistic and cultural contact (publishing houses, museums, art galleries, theatres, opera houses, etc.)
  • Contact and translanguaging practices
  • Minorized languages, language policies and revitalization
  • Contact, agency, identity, becoming
  • Narratives of contact
  • Contact and the formation of subjectivity
  • The materialities and economies of contact, labour, and care
  • Cultural contact and new technologies (audiovisual, sensory, cross-modal)
  • Transdisciplinary contacts and new interdisciplinary articulations of knowledge
  • Contact and epistemic justice
  • Contact and ethics
  • Colonial and imperial languages vs. Global English(es)

2nd CRLCC International Conference - Guest Speakers

Keynote speaker:

  • Mona Baker, University of Oslo
Headshot of Mona Baker

Guest Speakers:

  • Brian James Baer, Kent State University
Headshot of Brian James Baer
  • Caroline Payant, Université du Québec à Montréal
  • Diptiranjan Pattaneik, Banaras Hindu University
  • Fiona Patterson, York University
  • James Corcoran, York University
  • Johanna Nutter and Jack Paterson, Founders & Creative Producers of New Translation Canada | Nouvelle Traduction Canada
  • Seymour Mayne, Canadian poet and translator

Panel Proposals (3-8 participants)

Must be submitted by the organizers and include:

  • Names and affiliations of organizers and all participants
  • Title and brief description of the panel
  • A 200-word abstract for each presentation

Individual Paper/Poster Submissions

Must include:

  • Name and affiliation of the author(s)
  • Title of the presentation
  • A 200-word abstract

Workshop Proposals

Must include:

  • Names and affiliations of the organizers
  • Title and brief description of the workshop
  • Main objectives of the activity
  • Intended audience
  • Any technical requirements if applicable

Aesthetic/Audio-Visual Representations

Submissions related to the conference theme (painting, photography, mosaic, documentary, video, installation, etc.) must include:

  • Name and affiliation of the author(s)/artist(s)
  • Title and 200-word description of the piece
  • Any technical requirements

Graduate Translation Student Submissions

Graduate translation students are invited to submit proposals for papers or posters on a theme related to language, culture, or knowledge contacts addressed from the perspective of translation.

The 14th Annual Glendon Graduate Student Conference in Translation Studies will be held May 9-10, 2025, as part of the main conference.

Additional Information

The International Conference will be the culmination of a week of events organized by the Centre. It will be linked to the Spring Seminar (Archives, Language, and Translation), which will take place from May 6-9, 2025.

Spring Seminar participants can attend the conference free of charge.

For more information, please email crlccconference2025@gmail.com.

Proposals can be submitted in English or French.
Submission Deadline: January 15, 2025

On-Campus Housing:

  • Single Room (Traditional Dormitory Residence): $44/night + tax
  • Double Room (Traditional Dormitory Residence): $88/night + tax
  • Two-Bedroom Suite-Style Room: $120/night + tax

Book your stay here: YorkU Conference Housing

Hotel Partnership – Novotel Toronto North York

For additional convenience, we have partnered with Novotel Toronto North York, which offers special discounts to our conference participants.

Check hotel details & pricing: Hotel Information

If you would like to book a stay at Novotel, please kindly email crlcc@glendon.yorku.ca.

Interactive Campus Map

Aurelia Klimkiewicz, Translation | Translation Studies | Department of Global Communication and Cultures | York University, Glendon College

María Constanza Guzmán, Spanish and Latin American Cultures and Societies | Department of Global Communication and Cultures | York University, Glendon College

Ange Meng | The Centre for Research on Language and Culture Contact | York University, Glendon College

Hind Ben Salama, PhD Student, Humanities | York University 

Isabelle Lepage, PhD Student, Francophone Studies | York University, Glendon College

Eva Wissting, MA Student in Translation Studies | York University

More information is coming...

Registration

Please be advised that the registration deadline is March 15
Registration fees:
General participant - C$200
Non-Western Region Resident - C$75
Student – C$75
York Student – C$10

If you have any questions about registration, please contact crlcc@glendon.yorku.ca, and we will get back to you as soon as possible! Thank you!