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[ecrea] Rethinking Intermediality in the Digital Age
Thu May 02 20:44:38 GMT 2013
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CALL FOR PAPERS
RETHINKING INTERMEDIALITY IN THE DIGITAL AGE
International Conference: 24-26 October, 2013, Cluj-Napoca, Romania,
Sapientia University
deadline for applications: 20 May, 2013.
In the past decades "intermediality" has proved to be one of the most
productive terms in the domain of humanities. Although the ideas
regarding media connections may be traced back to the poetics of the
Romantics or even further back in time, it was the accelerated
multiplication of media themselves becoming our daily experience in the
second half of the twentieth century that propelled the term to a wide
attention in a great number of fields (communication and cultural
studies, philosophy, theories of literature and music, art history,
cinema studies, etc.) where it generated an impressive number of
analyses and theoretical discussions. "Intermediality is in"
(„Intermedialität ist in"), declared one of its pioneering theorists,
Joachim Paech, at the end of the 1990s. However, we may also note, that
since then other theoretical approaches introduced even newer
perspectives that have not only revitalized the study of media phenomena
in general but have specifically targeted the emerging new problematics
raised by the new electronic media. Facing the challenge of the daily
experiences of the digital age, discussions of media differences or
‘dialogues' highlighting the ‘inter,' the ‘gap,' the ‘in-between,' the
‘incommensurability' between media are currently being replaced by
discourses of the ‘enter' or ‘immersion,' and the ‘network logic' of a
‘convergence culture' in which we have a "free flow of content over
different media platforms" (Henry Jenkins). At the same time the turn
towards the corporeality of perception in all aspects of communication
has also shifted the attention from the ‘interaction of media' towards
the ‘interaction with media,' from the idea of ‘media borders' towards
the analysis of the blurring of perception between media and reality, of
humans and machines - media being perceived more and more not as a form
of representation but as an environment and as a means to ‘augment' reality.
Nowadays media continuously mutate, relocate and expand, while
connections between ‘old' and ‘new' media are being established with
incredible fluidity. Accordingly, we may ask: what are the new
perspectives for intermedial research in the digital age? While media
are continuously changing and expanding, how can we relocate the
"in-between"? If we consider ‘intermediality' first and foremost - as
suggested by Jürgen E. Müller - as a "research concept" (Suchbegriff),
how can this concept be effectively applied to the media we see around
us today? And if we believe that the "ecosystem" of contemporary media
can be understood not as a unified digital environment that nullifies
differences, but as a thriving and highly diversified, "multisensory
milieu" (Jacques Rancière) that poses new challenges both for the
consumer/producer and the theorist, how can we address these challenges?
How do media differences persist and how do these differences still
matter despite voices advocating the so called "post-medium condition"?
As the former Nordic Society for Intermedial Studies launches its own
expanded, international format (International Society for Intermedial
Studies/ISIS), we think it is timely to address once more the major
issues for which this society exists, and to invite participants to
examine new forms of ‘intermedialities.' In doing so participants may
address a broad range of questions relating to ‘old media' and ‘new
media,' and their possible interactions, focusing on the wide array of
intermedia phenomena and new type of relationships that new media have
produced, but also on how pre-digital media relations can be
re-evaluated, and how historical paradigms of intermediality may already
be distinguishable viewed from the standpoint of the contemporary media
landscape.
Proposals may address (but are not limited to) the following questions
either from a theoretical point of view or through concrete analyses:
* Media on the move? Media relations produced by expansions and
relocations of media (e.g. "the virtual life of film," the expansions of
the "photographic" and of the "cinematic" over other media,
e-literature, etc.), the emergence of mobile screens, the fact that
media use is more and more related to moving in the literal sense of the
word: mobility and navigation.
* Relocating the ‘in-between': intermediality, inter-sensuality,
multimodality and interactivity, assessing the contribution of cognitive
theories (and neuroscience), phenomenology and post-phenomenology to the
study of understanding interactions of media and interactions with
multiple media.
* Performing in (new) intermedial spaces: intermedial performance in art
and society. Being ‘in touch' with reality - being ‘in touch with
media:' researching new (trans)media practices.
* Intermediality and new forms of digital storytelling: new perspectives
in transmedial narratology, new media and narratology (e.g. narrativity
and e-platforms, games versus "old" media etc.), the aesthetics of the
intermedia flow, of complex, network narratives generated by the
experiences of the new media age.
* Modelling and mapping intermedialities: historical paradigms of
intermedial relations (pre-modern, modern, post-modern intermediality);
the aesthetics and ‘politics' of intermediality before and after the
digital age; historical research on intermediality related to media
migration, cultural heritage and changing relationships between
production, distribution, and perception.
Confirmed keynote speakers:
* HENRY JENKINS, University of Southern California (USA), author of
Convergence Culture: where Old and New Media Collide (2007), currently
co-authoring a book on "Spreadable Media."
* JOACHIM PAECH, University of Konstanz (Germany), author of Menschen im
Kino. Film und Literatur erzählen (2000), Literatur und Film (1997),
PASSION oder Die EinBILDungen des Jean-Luc Godard (1989), as well as
several seminal articles on the theory of intermediality in film,
literature, and new media.
* MARIE-LAURE RYAN, independent scholar, Colorado (USA), co-editor of
Intermediality and Storytelling (2010), author of Avatars of Story
(Electronic Mediations) (2006), Narrative across Media: The Languages of
Storytelling (2004), Narrative as Virtual Reality. Immersion and
Interactivity in Literature and Electronic Media (2001), etc.
Deadline for the submission of proposals: 20 May 2013.
We will notify you about the acceptance of your proposals by: 1 June 2013.
Submission of proposals: please complete the submission form that you
can download from the conference website:
http://film.sapientia.ro/en/conferences/rethinking-intermediality-in-the-digital-age
and send it as an attachment to the following address:
(2013.rethinking.intermediality /at/ gmail.com)
More information at:
http://film.sapientia.ro/en/conferences/rethinking-intermediality-in-the-digital-age
Best regards to everybody, and looking forward to an exciting conference!
Feel free to circulate this call!
...
Dr. AGNES PETHO, Head of Department
Sapientia University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania
Department of Film, Photography, and Media,
http://film.sapientia.ro/en
Executive editor: Acta Universitatis Sapientiae: Film & Media Studies
http://www.acta.sapientia.ro/acta-film/film-main.htm
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