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[ecrea] Cfp2: Digital Archives, Audiovisual Media and Cultural Memory
Fri May 17 17:03:20 GMT 2013
Digital Archives, Audiovisual Media and Cultural Memory
Conference, The University of Copenhagen, November 14-15, 2013
www.larm-archive.org/conference
Keynote speakers:
David Hendy, University of Sussex
Karin Bijsterveld, Maastricht University
Lev Manovich, City University of New York
Michele Hilmes, University of Wisconsin-Madison
We welcome abstracts for our open paper sessions and for panels taking
place at the conference. Sub-calls for the panels can be found by
following the links bellow.
Digitization enables us to meet cultural heritage artifacts and
narratives in heretofore unimagined media and platforms. Accessibility
to written, visual, auditory and audiovisual sources increase
dramatically. But how do we wish to access and interact with cultural
heritage sources in the 21st Century? This conference focuses on
practices of cultural memory in the multiform meetings between users and
cultural heritage. What interfaces are established between users, be
they researchers or ‘ordinary’ citizens, and the archives of cultural
heritage? What possibilities are opened for interaction with cultural
heritage artifacts? And what methods and scientific paradigms are
relevant to order and describe such immense archives.
One aspect, which seems still to have received too little treatment is
the question of the auditory and audiovisually based cultural heritage’s
role in the construction of historical narratives. Music, film, radio,
and television have become ingrained in a nation’s cultural memory, and
in many, not least, European countries, state-governed national
broadcasting corporations have played and do still play a vital role in
narrating and interpreting the past, not least by establishing
institutional production archives which give producers access to
historical material otherwise inaccessible. Such reuses of historical
materials afford renegotiations of the historical past(s) by valuating
the new historical materials as significant historical sources.
Digitization means that such historical materials, be they broadcast or
other cultural heritage artifacts, are to an increasing degree
accessible outside the production environment, e.g. for research. One
recurring problem is that the materials are still under the editorial
control of the parent institution and accessible only for some uses to
some users. This motivates a new look at the question of who has the
right to circulate archived material in what forms, and thus who is
allowed to narrate the past. The question is relevant at all levels,
from the level of national cultural politics all the way down to the
concrete definition of rights for individual users in the archive or on
broadcaster’s websites.
The conference wishes to contribute new perspectives on the first by
focusing on (access to) digital media archives, a phenomenon that has
only really come into existence within the last decades; Secondly, by
focusing on auditory and audiovisual source material, i.e. data sources
with an extension in time, as oppose to texts and pictures. Again,
digital archives of auditory and audiovisual material are rather young
compared to archives of (scanned) texts and pictures. Finally, the
conference’s focus is on the digital archives’ role in the construction
of a cultural history as well as studies in cultural history and
cultural memory. Traditionally, digital humanities have tended to focus
on the internal structure of artifacts, e.g. using digital texts to
investigate language systems, translations, stylistics etc.
The conference welcomes contributions from a broad range of researchers,
designers and developers who work with digital archives of auditory and
audiovisual media in the investigation or production of cultural history
phenomena. All of these definitions shall be taken in their widest
sense. A digital archive can range from enormous national archives to
the archives collected by individual researchers and research groups.
Similarly, the conference wishes to invited both concrete experience
with collecting and using a digital archives as well as theoretical
reflections on the nature of the digital archive. Likewise, the concepts
of cultural history and cultural memory shall be taken in their broadest
sense and can include both historical investigations and research within
the broader humanities with either an historical or an aesthetic scope.
Papers
We welcome papers relating to the general outline of the above call. The
conference will embrace three sub themes: Interface (i.e. the
construction, design and interface of the archive), Immensity (dealing
with the vast amounts of data which all of a sudden are available to
research that has heretofore tended to work qualitatively with rather
small samples), Memory (choosing from the archives, sampling and
building a coherent interpretation). Please indicate if your paper
addresses one or two of the themes in particular.
Panels
Along with open and themed paper sessions, we have accepted a number of
themed panels to take place at the conference. A themed panel will
consist of a minimum of 3 papers with a common research question. If you
whish your paper to be taken under consideration for a particular panel,
please select the panel as "category" in the Easy Chair submission form.
Submissions not accepted for panels will be taken into consideration for
the open paper sessions.
· The practices of exhibiting sound, organized by Christian
Hviid Mortensen & Morten Søndergaard
· Infrastructural Sustainability and Curatorial Practices of
the Digital Archive, organized by Luca Antoniazzi
· How to make radio and sound archives work for audiences?
Organized by Zillah Watson?
· Who keeps the memory? Organized by Teo Mäusli, Brecht
Declercq & Petra van Dijk
· Challenging the homogeneity of ’media language’, organized
by Jacob Thøgersen
· My Childhood Radios, organized by Henrik Reeh?
· Transnational Radio Encounters, organized by Golo Föllmer &
Jacob Kreutzfeldt
· Radio and Music/Music Radio, organized by Morten Michelsen
Submissions
Deadline for paper abstracts (max 200 words) 1 June 2013?Notification on
acceptance will be given by the beginning of July 2013
Please send submissions via EasyChair:
https://www.easychair.org/account/signin.cgi?conf=larm2013. Please
forward the automatically generated submission confirmation to:
(conference /at/ larm-archive.org).
We strongly encourage presentations of practice based and artistic projects.
Conference fee: 60 € (reduced price for students)
Affiliation
Digital Archives, Audiovisual Media and Cultural Memory is arranged by
LARM Audio Research Archive. LARM is an interdisciplinary project, the
goal of which is the production of a digital infrastructure to
facilitate researchers’ access to the Danish radiophonic cultural heritage.
The LARM project is a collaboration between a number of research and
cultural institutions: The University of Copenhagen, Aarhus University,
Roskilde University, The University of Southern Denmark, Aalborg
University, The Royal School of Library and Information Science, The
Danish Broadcasting Corporation, The State and University Library,
Danish e-Infrastructure Cooperation, Kolding School of Design and The
Museum of Media.
The main purpose of LARM is to establish a digital archive with the
appropriate tools and a bibliography to enable researchers to search and
describe the many recordings of the radiophonic cultural heritage. Radio
has played an important role in Danish lives and, today, radio
broadcasts form an invaluable, yet untapped, source to Danish culture
and history. LARM Audio Research Archive will allow access to thousands
of hours of national and local radio broadcasts from 1925 and onwards
and thus prepare them for future research.
LARM – Audio Research Archive: http://www.larm-archive.org/
Organisation
Organizers: Jacob Thøgersen, Jacob Kreutzfeldt, Morten Michelsen, Per
Jauert, Frederik Tygstrup & Bente Larsen
Scientific committee: Morten Søndergaard, Erik Granly, Ditte Laursen,
Marianne Lykke, Birger Larsen, Erik Svendsen
Contact: for questions and enquiries please contact Jacob Kreutzfeldt
((jacobk /at/ hum.ku.dk)) or Jacob Thøgersen ((jthoegersen /at/ hum.ku.dk))
Please consult the conferences website at: www.larm-archive.org/conference
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