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[ecrea] The Seen and Unseen: The Visual Culture of Imperialism
Tue Nov 11 02:54:50 GMT 2014
The Seen and Unseen: The Visual Culture of Imperialism
Much of the perception of the world around us is constructed visually. 
This visual representation, which includes drawings, paintings, 
artworks, photography, and more recently moving images such as films, 
cartoons, book covers, posters, and advertisements illuminates the ways 
we see ourselves and those around us. Derived and informed by social, 
political and historical shifts these visual representations form what 
scholars call a ‘visual culture’ of representation.
This visual culture of representation plays a significant part in social 
and political power relations and control.  What has been continuously 
represented or seen gradually can form a preferred mode of reading and 
viewing of certain cultures. On the other hand, what is unseen, due to 
continuos misrepresentations, silences, or inabilities of expressions, 
as well as social and political censorships and control, can lead to an 
inability of those represented to break free from preferred modes of 
representation.
This edited collection brings together essays and scholarly examinations 
of the visual representation of the Islamic Identity within a wide 
visual context, including on film, posters, photography, book covers, 
etc.  In particular, it aims to examine how visual imperialism through 
the seen and unseen, has formed and constructed an already established 
visual culture of representation which has defined Muslim identities. By 
focusing on the broad theme of "representation", this edited volume 
seeks for an interdisciplinary re-thinking of the sociopolitical and 
cultural issues of the visual imperialims in the conetxt of Muslim 
representation. We invite papers on a broad range of topics pertinent to 
the theme of visual culture of imperialism including but not limited to:
·      Visual Orientalism/Imperialism of Muslims
·      Theoretical discussion of the concept of representation
·      Representation of the “other”
·      Orientalism and self-orientalism
·      Rethinking Muslim identity
·      Representation of gender and sexuality
Please send a 500 word abstract along with your affiliation and 
biographical statement to Dr. Sanaz Fotouhi at (sanaz.fotouhi /at/ gmail.com) 
Dr. Esmaeil Zeiny at (mehdizeiny /at/ gmail.com)  by November 25. Full paper 
must be submitted no later than March 31, 2015.
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