Themes
Languages, Media, and the Arts
This theme focuses on modalities of human expression and communication in linguistic, artistic, digital, and other media. Specifically, what characterizes work in this theme is attention to the study of ancient and modern languages; the structure, development, and psychology of languages; storytelling forms and practices in film, literature, theatre, and popular culture; and systems and technologies of interpersonal and global communication. Possible subareas:
- texts, meanings, and contexts
- creativity and imagination in theory and practice
- interplay of media and political, social, and cultural life
Social, Economic, and Political Ethics, Relationships and Structures
This theme focuses on understanding relationships between and among groups of people: what those relationships create, sustain, challenge, and resist. This includes examining, at a minimum, institutions, organizations, social networks, and cultures and social structures, often with particular attention paid to the ethics and relationships of power, resource distribution, reproduction, and change. Possible subareas:
- theories and practices of organizational and/or institutional change
- meaning-making practices, values, and ethics
- structures of power, privilege, and oppression (e.g. racism, colonialism, sexism, homophobia, ableism, classism)
Space and Place
This theme focuses on the relationship of humans and our environment. Work in this theme considers the role of human agency and of power in the context of varied and intersecting physical and social contexts. Specifically, attention to resources, development, sustainability, land, and water, and to concepts including the anthropocene, imaginary environments, and representations of space and place characterize work in this theme. Possible subareas:
- distribution of income, environment, and sustainability
- intersections of science, ethics, technology
Time, Tradition, and Change
This theme focuses on the chronological dimension of human experience and the continuities and discontinuities in social formations, ideas, artistic practices, religious rites, and political institutions over time. Specifically, attention to issues of preservation and transformation, memory and forgetting, and the histories of places, communities, and linguistic practices characterize work in this theme. Possible subareas:
- social memory and identities
- development
- economic resources in local and global settings
- the history of political institutions
- the history of ideas