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[ecrea] CFP: Re-enacting the Past: Memory, Materiality, Performance
Wed Aug 17 13:39:43 GMT 2011
*Re-enacting the Past: Memory, Materiality, Performance*
Call for papers, special issue of /theInternational Journal of Heritage
Studies/
This special issue focuses on /re-enacting the past/:that is, on
performances that act and re-act upon past events by processes ofmimesis
or (selective) repetition. In recent years, a great deal of compelling
research has emerged on narrative, visual and material /representations/
of the past. Few scholars, however, have addressedthe manifold
processes, performances and collaborations through which pastevents are
re-staged and re-presenced, and analysed them as such. Thus, in
thisspecial issue we will focus on the more-than-representational layers
in /presenting/ the past, the mediated representationsfrom which
re-enactments often draw their inspiration, as well as the politicsof
such re-performances.  We seekto explore various processes related to
heritage performance and the "production of presence" (Gumbrecht 2004)
forming around, and referring to past events and scenarios. In
addition, we will take up the question of why these processes and
performancesare important subjects for scholarly critique within
heritage studies.
Re-enactment as a term is well known from studies in history and
historiography, especially from Collingwood's theories on "history as
re-enactment of past experience". In such studies, the concept of
re-enactment is almost invariably tied to discussions on the
relationship and level of similarity between past and present experience
(Dilthey, Ankersmit). In contrast to historical studies of this kind, we
want to focus more sharply on the work 'history' does in the present
and on the concerns and consequences of such 'doing'. The consequences
of re-performing pastevents and scenarios can be manifold: it may
involve an /exoticism/ of the past, as in some nostalgic tourist and
cultural heritage locations; it can produce /learning /through bodily
practices that re-create past gestures, rituals and performances(e.g.
time travels, festivals, advanced tourist learning concepts,
Gulagtourism), it may seek a /healing/ and/or/socially/ /transformative/
effect through retelling and re-membering traumatic or violent pasts, or
it can serve to invoke /empathy /and/or /heightened awareness/ by
re-vitalizing forgotten, abject, repressed or difficult pasts.
While opening the field of heritagestudies to various forms of
re-enactment, we wish to foreground bodily andspatial engagements and
performances, as well as the crucial role of objects, inscription
technologies and other 'non-human actors' (Latour). By ' thinking
through things' (Henare et al. 2007) as well as through medias we invite
contributors to view technological empowerment, material quality
andartifactual power as going beyond representation and empowering
processes of re-enacting and memorializing. Also, the role (and
experience) of /time/ and temporality is often critical, as such
re-stagings often attempt to somehow break, stop or even symbolically
reverse time.
Bracketing issues of representation,rationality and knowledge, we seek
instead to highlight dimensions of affect,vitality, immediacy and/or
experience. We aim to contribute to themethodological and theoretical
development of memory analysis within heritageand cultural studies,
understood broadly as non-representational /practice/, by exploring the
multilayeredeffects of various instances of re-staging and by
reinvigorating the past withinthe present. We thus invite scholars
interested in investigating re-enactment to submit their abstracts to
Britta Timm Knudsen ((norbtk /at/ hum.au.dk) <mailto:(norbtk /at/ hum.au.dk)>), Mads
Daugbjerg ((mads.daugbjerg /at/ hum.au.dk) <mailto:(mads.daugbjerg /at/ hum.au.dk)>)
or Rivka Eisner ((ihorei /at/ hum.au.dk) <mailto:(ihorei /at/ hum.au.dk)>).Final
articles should be between 6000 and 8000 words including notes and
references and must be accompanied by a 150 word abstract and up to six
key words.
Possible questions and topic areas include:
How is thepast acted or re-acted upon? What is /altered/, and what is
kept the same, through different performative acts that serve to
commemorate, enliven orreconcile past events?
By what kinds of present markers (e.g. dimensions of affect, vitality,
and/or immediacy) isthe past re-enchanted or re-invigorated within
tourist or nostalgic settings,in reenactment societies or among
individuals or groups who seek to re-createpast gestures, rituals or
performances?
What notions of temporality are involved in understanding the overall
spatial logics ofperformative acts and re-enactments?
Are distinctions between different framings of the re-enactment still
relevant(such as recreations of history as art, e.g. Jeremy Deller)?
How does one distinguish between different re-enactment gestures, the
uses of varioustechnologies and medias, and their conceptual
consequences (imitations,citations, remediations, re-enactments,
repetitions, re-creations)?
How are heritage re-enactments created, experienced and understood
differently (or similarly) invarious cultural contexts and by different
groups?
In what ways are re-enactments designed or intended for different
audiences? What difference does the question of "audience" make?
How does experiencing the past, or heritage, through re-enactments
initiate learningprocesses? What different sorts of politics arise when
addressing "firsthand" and "secondhand" memory of the past and its
pedagogically oriented re-enactments?
*Due Dates*
Abstracts: November 1,2011
First drafts: April 1,2012
Reviews returned:
Final drafts:
Submission to Journal:
Please use the IJHSstyle guide:
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/authors/style/layout/tf_1.pdf
Quick guide:
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/authors/style/layout/tf_quick1-4.pdf
Additional information:
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/journal.asp?issn=1352-7258&linktype=44
<http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/journal.asp?issn=1352-7258&linktype=44>
All submissions will go through the full IJHS review process.
Britta Timm Knudsen
lektor, ph.d./Associate Professor Ph.D.
Nordisk Institut/Scandinavian Institute
Jens Chr. Skousvej 7, 467/324
Aarhus Universitet/Aarhus University
8000 Aarhus C
Denmark
t: 89422450 /29263916 /86163070
e: (norbtk /at/ hum.au.dk) <mailto:(norbtk /at/ hum.au.dk)>
http://person.au.dk/en/norbtk@hum
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