[Air-L] CFP Movement, Aesthetics, Ontology Conference, 16-17 May 2013, Turku

Tero Karppi tero.karppi at gmail.com
Fri Dec 21 08:56:20 PST 2012


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* please circulate -  apologies for cross-postings *****

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*Call for  Papers*****

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*MOVEMENT, AESTHETICS, ONTOLOGY*****

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*IV Annual Conference on the New Materialisms*****

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*16–17 May 2013, School of History, Culture and Arts Studies, University of
Turku, Finland*****

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New materialist approaches are increasingly announced, articulated,
exercised and contested across a gamut of often entwining research fields
from art theory, media studies and feminist philosophy to sociology, gender
and sexuality research, and science and environmental studies. In addition
to the cross-evolving discussions in these areas, there is growing need to
consider the connections but also specificity of new materialisms in
relation to many contemporaneous intellectual developments, such as new
forms of realism or post-human(ist) thought. Given these conditions, the
fourth international conference on the new materialisms suggests that it is
crucial to steer clear of “a manifesto quality” when arguing for the
distinctiveness and cutting-edge relevance of new materialist approaches, a
risk perceptively noted by Barbara Bolt (2013). Instead, theorists and
practitioners involved in this endeavour need to inquire with insistence,
rigour and creativity what might be the distinguishing *concepts* of new
materialisms, accompanied by associated problems, theoretical inspirations,
methodological choices, and socio-political, ethical significances.****

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To encourage inquiries of this kind, the conference at the University of
Turkuinvites scholars and postgraduate students of wide
(trans-)disciplinary diversity to submit proposals for 20 minute
presentations and for panels ofmaximum four papers in reference to *three
concepts. *Variations of them seem to inform much of the research done in
the name of new materialisms orlinkable with these approaches. The concepts
are *movement, aesthetics, *and* ontology*. Far from serving as
prescriptive closures to what new materialisms involve, the concepts are
offered here as condensation points of concerns that incarnate very
differently depending on the context in which they are engaged. Yet, they
are among the notions that arguably bring substance and consistency to new
materialist modes of thinking and intervention – in ways both currently
manifest and yet to be discovered. Movement pertains, for example, to the
primacy given in many new materialist pursuits to process, emergence and
the vibrancy of matter, whereas aesthetics may refer to the importance of
sensation, affect, inter-/amodality or new sense- and feeling-based
conceptions of politics. Ontology implicates a range of neomaterialist
themes and affiliations from nature–culture continua to
non-representational thought.****

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We look forward to receiving contributions of theoretical, empirical,
practice-based and activist orientation that somehow explore, assess,
elaborate or connectthese concepts with regard to the formative stages,
recent actualizations and future potential of new materialisms. The work of
our distinguished keynotespeakers is exemplary of the ways in which
movement, aesthetics and ontology matter to and through new materialist
examinations of the arts, the body, gender, technology, entanglements of
materiality and sociality, and human–non-human relations.****

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Topics of the presentation and panel proposals may include, as well as go
beyond, thefollowing:****

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-      continua of theory and practice; art and philosophy; material and
social****

-      methodologies: how to study processes, relations, affect, the new?***
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-      new or radical empiricism: how to take account of emergence and
complexity?****

-      revisiting aesthetics and politics****

-      ontologies of art, object, sex, work, medium, etc.****

-      neomaterialist analysis of social mobilities, activism, and economies
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-      multisensory/intermodal movements of thinking and knowing****

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*Confirmed keynote speakers*****

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Estelle Barrett (Communication & Creative Arts, Deakin University,
Australia)****

Barbara Bolt (Victoria College of Arts, University of Melbourne, Australia)*
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Patricia Pisters (Media and Film Studies, University of Amsterdam, The
Netherlands)****

Jukka Sihvonen (History, Culture & Arts Studies, University of Turku,
Finland)****

Iris van der Tuin (Gender Studies, Utrecht University, The Netherlands)****

Cecilia Åsberg (Posthuman Hub, Linköping University, Sweden)****

*Proposals for panels and individual papers*****

Abstracts should be sent in the following format:
(1) Title
(2) Presenter(s)
(3) Institutional affiliation
(4) Email
(5) Abstract (individual proposals: 200–300 words; panel proposals: general
description of 150–200 words, 200–300 words for each paper)****

Please use your surname as the document title. Abstracts for panels and
twenty-minute presentations should be submitted as an email attachment to
4thconference at newmaterialism.eu by* Monday 4 February 2013*. We are happy
to consider both established and alternative presentation formats from
academic papers to illustrations of artistic research practice,
performance-talks, etc. We will advise all proposers of accepted
presentations within two weeks of the deadline.****

*Attendance and accommodation*****

Attendance at this conference is free of charge. University of Turku cannot
provide orbook accommodation for presenters, but the conference website at
http://movementaestheticsontology.wordpress.com/ will include information
about possible places to stay in Turku once notifications of acceptance
have been posted.****

*This conference is associated with the following conference series:*****

-      The international conference series on New Materialisms. The first
conference ”New Materialisms and Digital Culture” was held at Anglia Ruskin
University in Cambridge in June  2010 and the second ”Naturecultures” at
the Utrecht University in April 2011. The third conference ”Entanglements
of New Materialisms” was organized by Linköping University in May 2012. The
keynote speakers of these events have included, among others, Stacy Alamo,
Donna Haraway, Vicky Kirby, Adrian MacKenzie and Anna Powell. This event is
the 4th New Materialisms conference.****

-      Rethinking Art Studies (REARS) conference series. The first
conference ”Regulated Liberties: Negotiating Freedom in Art, Culture and
Media” was held at the University of Turku in August 2009. Keynote speakers
included Bracha Ettinger, Brian Massumi and Tiina Rosenberg. This event is
the 2nd REARS conference.****



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