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[ecrea] NECSUS_Autumn 2015_‘Vintage’ -- call for submissions
Fri Sep 26 00:51:21 GMT 2014
NECSUS_Autumn 2015_‘Vintage’ -- call for submissions
Guest editor: Kim Knowles (Aberystwyth University)
Few issues are as pertinent today as the relationship between old and
new, past and present, obsolescence and progress. Paradoxically, as the
obsession with the new in contemporary society intensifies, so too does
our interest in older technologies, styles, and artefacts. Advertising
and marketing in particular have tapped into the selling potential of
nostalgia and references to the past permeate just about every cultural
domain from film, television, art, and music, to fashion, food, tourism,
and interior design. Terms such as ‘retro’ and ‘vintage’ have become
commonplace, both frequent appendages to item searches on Ebay and other
shopping sites/outlets. How do we define and distinguish these terms,
and how might they be unpacked to shed light on the processes by which
history is evaluated, appropriated, and consumed?
Unlike retro and nostalgia, vintage has received little critical
attention despite its ubiquity in the fields of fashion and furniture.
The complexity of the term derives from its relationship to taste and
value and rituals of acquisition and exchange. Situated somewhere
between retro irony and antique sobriety, vintage carries a host of
connotations that shift in relation to contextual and historical
markers. From the ragpickers of flea markets and car boot sales to the
affluent consumers of highly-priced rarities, vintage traverses
disparate spaces, identities, and practices, encompassing both
mainstream and alternative attitudes and ethics.
A host of historical and philosophical commentators, from Benjamin to
Baudrillard, have grappled with our relationship to history through
modes of representation and ways of seeing. Whilst for Benjamin an
engagement with the past can mean redemption in the present, Baudrillard
sees our cultural obsession with history as emptied of meaning – a
reflection of the postmodernist decline of the real. How to consolidate
these different positions within a theory of vintage? What can a study
of vintage with its shifting meanings, its complications and
contradictions, reveal about our attachment to the past and its
significance in the present? What is the relationship between vintage
and practices of remembering, both personal and collective, and how
might these practices be activated in ways that go beyond consumerism?
Notable here are recent studies of media and nostalgia – Amy
Holdsworth’s Television, Memory and Nostalgia (Palgrave Macmillan,
2011), Lucas Hilderbrand’s Inherent Vice: Bootleg Histories of Videotape
and Copyright (Duke University Press, 2009), and Katharina Niemeyer’s
edited collection Media and Nostalgia: Yearning for the Past, Present
and Future (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014). How do we negotiate the fine line
between nostalgic reification (Baudrillard) and critical interrogation
(Benjamin)? How does vintage connect with popular culture and what Simon
Reynolds has termed ‘retromania’ in his book Retromania: Pop Culture’s
Addiction to Its Own Past (Faber & Faber, 2011)?
This NECSUS special section aims to answer some of these questions,
building a theory of vintage that stretches across different media. It
will bring together a wide range of new perspectives on and critical
approaches to the theme of vintage, opening up the topic to related
fields of enquiry and making connections across disciplines and
theoretical paradigms. Topics may include, but are not restricted to,
the following:
# Vintage aesthetics
# Vintage fashion
# Vintage and new media
# Retro-technology
# Second-hand cultures
# Vintage, taste, and value
# Memory and memorabilia
# Practices and rituals of collection and exchange (including spaces of
exchange)
# Vintage and nostalgia
# Relationships between vintage, antique, and retro
# Psychoanalytic perspectives (e.g. theories of mourning, loss, and lack)
# Postmodernism and history
# Contemporary engagements with the archive
# Vintage and obsolescence
# Vintage, authenticity, and the auratic
# Vintage theory
We look forward to receiving abstracts of 300 words, 3-5 bibliographic
references, and a short biography of 100 words by 10 October 2014 at the
following address: <(g.decuir /at/ aup.nl)>. On the basis of selected abstracts
writers will be invited to submit full manuscripts (5000-7000 words,
revised abstract, 4-5 keywords) which will subsequently go through a
blind peer review process.
NECSUS accepts abstract submissions on a rolling basis throughout the
year for a wide variety of articles on a number of themes related to
media studies, in addition to proposals for the following types of
reviews: festivals, exhibits, books. Please note that we do not accept
full manuscripts for consideration. Access our submission guidelines
online at <necsus-ejms.org>.
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