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<title><string language="fre"><![CDATA[Going Local and Getting Personal: Toward a Regional Reading Practice / Nancy Cook]]></string></title>
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<string language="fre"><![CDATA[Going Local and Getting Personal: Toward a Regional Reading Practice / Nancy Cook, in symposium international "Regional Becomings in North America" organisé sous la responsabilité scientifique de Wendy Harding (Cultures Anglo-Saxonnes (CAS),
Université Toulouse Jean Jaurès, France) et Nancy Cook (University of Montana, USA), Université Toulouse Jean Jaurès, 7-8 avril 2016. 
Session 3 : Defining Place, Defining Self.
* Les images présentées par Nancy Cook lors de sa conférence sont du photographe Nicholas Trofimuk.
Critics often think of the regional and regionalism in terms of texts or works of art. This presentation asks that we turn that around in order to re-imagine
what a set of critical regionalist reading practices might look like and how they might function in counter-hegemonic, even confrontational ways which, rather than reifying regional mythologies and beliefs, can open up a space for sometimes transformative examinations. 
A few questions provide a starting point for such a conversation. They include: What happens when readers or viewers who are commonly not thought of as a target audience encounter a text that speaks for or about them, or offers them up as textual material, examples, case studies?  How can regionalist, or even microregionalist reading interventions work to locate those often thought as isolated from artistic and cultural discourses in a set of larger and connected conversations? What happens when readers/viewers have “local knowledge” that might complement or contradict a text or work of art?  And finally, how can moments of disjuncture between a localized subject position, a regional one, a national one, or a global one become productive
towards a new critical regional identity. Examples include a local reading of Lucy Lippard’s The Lure of the Local, an opinion piece/admonishment of President Obama by California writer Gerald Haslam, and the best selling Jon Krakauer expose, Missoula.]]></string></description>
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NOTE:Nancy Cook teaches in the English Department at The University of Montana, Missoula (USA). A graduate of Occidental College and a Ph.D. from SUNY Buffalo, Prof. Cook's publications include "Home on the Range. Montana Romance Novels and Geographies of Hope" in All Our Stories are Here, 2009 and "The Romance of Ranching; or Selling Place-Based Fantasies in and of the West" in Postwestern Cultures. Literature, Theory, Space, 2007. Currently, she is at work on a book-length study of women who lived and worked in western National Parks. > Voir sa page personnelle (Univ. of Montana). 
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