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[ecrea] CFP: Temporalities, Futures and Social Change
Wed Jan 07 22:48:55 GMT 2015
Connected Communities and Care for the Future themes are co-hosting a
symposium in May on the theme of ‘Utopias, Futures and Temporalities:
critical considerations for social change’
Deadline for proposals: Feb 15th to (K.Dunleavy /at/ bristol.ac.uk)
http://connected-communities.org/index.php/first-call-symposium-on-utopias-futures-social-change/
2016 is the 500 year anniversary of the first publication of Thomas
More’s Utopia. Such a moment encourages reflection on the uses and
misuses of utopias and dystopias in social change as well as critical
reflection on the contribution of ideas of the future and of temporality
to the processes of social transformation.
The ideals of citizenship encourage us all to desire a stake in the
future – whether trying to shape our own lives, those of our families,
the places we live, or wider society – and to imagine a better or
different world. But what is this entity that we name ‘future’? Senses
of time vary across and within human societies, and disciplines from
philosophy to natural science present equally differing conceptions of
it. By invoking ‘utopias/dystopias’ we wish to explore the questions of
positionality, power, hope and despair that are at play in the
imagination of new times and the way that these effect change in the
present. By pluralising ‘futures’, we want to explore the diversity of
ways in which anticipatory practices can be performed by people and
communities. And by invoking ‘temporalities’, we want to reflect on how
the qualities of time – endurance, succession, speed, rhythm, for
example – interact with imaginings and perceptions of what is to come.
Perhaps, by better understanding the temporal qualities of society,
culture and environments, we could create social change at a scale and
pace that connects communities with their futures, rather than
disenfranchises them. Perhaps again, by invoking utopias and dystopias,
we may recognise that questions of future possibility are not simply
technical, but involve politics, fear, despair, hope, imagination,
dreams, desires and aspirations, all of which may act as stimulus or
disincentives for social change
Key questions include:
How have different societies thought about ‘the future’? What role have
different conceptions of the future played in confronting the problems
of the present or reflecting on those of the past? What role do ideas of
the future play in creating and connecting communities? How do
narratives across past, present and future cohere? How do the different
temporalities of human, environmental and technological change
inter-relate? How do societies and communities use and construct
utopias, dystopias and other forms of anticipation to build agency and
capacity for change? What impedes or enables these processes? What
methodological and theoretical resources do we have for thinking about
futurity and temporality?
Aspirations for the event
This two-day interdisciplinary symposium aims to bring together
researchers and activists working across academia, civil society,
heritage and arts organisations. We expect it to involve those who are
concerned with questions of social and environmental change,
humanitarian challenges, and community empowerment and participation, as
well as with the role of philosophy, art, history, theory, social
science and cultural studies in exploring questions of hope, agency,
temporality and the future.
The event will be curated to foster new conversations and the
development of productive new areas for research and social action. We
expect the event to lead into opportunities for collaboration, writing
and research leading up to the 2016 500 year anniversary of the
publication of More’s Utopia.
Themes
The symposium will accept papers on a wide variety of themes related to
the overarching focus of the event. To provoke conversations and
stimulate collaborations, we propose a number of topics that might be
generative. Submissions should explain how they relate to the theme of
‘Utopias, temporalities and futures: critical considerations for social
change’.
* Anticipation, abundance and anxiety: when is anticipation healthy
and expansive, and when does it become pathological?
* Conflict, trauma and recovery
* Critical temporalities: reimagining time as part of reimagining
social life
* Heritage, stewardship & trusteeship: what is the role of history
in shaping and caring for the future?
* Historical legacies: how do some aspects of the past endure into
the present and future?
* Imagination and agency: how are imaginative conceptions of time
and change related to the capacity to act?
* Intergenerational responsibility, justice and ethics
* Materialising futures through creative practice: how can artists,
architects and designers work with communities to imagine and make futures?
* Human and more than human futures, where is the locus of future
making?
* Novelty and contingency: what are the possibilities for radical
uncertainty and the emergence of the new?
* The role of time in social inclusion and exclusion
* The relationship between Utopias and dystopias
Symposium Session Formats
We are keen to encourage a variety of different session formats. The
exact timing of these sessions will depend on the mix of abstracts
submitted. Our aim is to encourage a space for dialogue and sharing of
ideas that moves beyond the simple presentation of existing research.
* Roundtables: Cross disciplinary and cross-sectoral conversations
of up to 4 people, for 90 minutes
* Papers: 30 minutes + 30 minute discussion
* Workshops : 90 minutes to explore how ‘using futures’ or thinking
differently about temporality might be mobilised to effect positive
change in the present
* Posters/ Pecha Kucha: Quick fire poster presentations to
summaries emerging research and tentative ideas
* Open Space sessions: 2 hour sessions to generate and explore new
directions in research and practice
* Practice as Research Submission: this might take the form of a
short performance, small exhibition/installation or other format as
appropriate. Note that time and space is limited so if you have
ambitious ideas, please contact the organisers directly to discuss.
Format For Submission
All proposals should be sent by February 14th to Katherine Dunleavy at
K.Dunleavy @bristol.ac.uk
Any questions concerning the event or proposal formats should be
directed to Keri Facer at (Keri.Facer /at/ bristol.ac.uk) For all submissions,
please specify which Connected Communities or Care for the Future
project you have been associated with.
Roundtable proposals
1500 word abstract (including references) identifying the 4 speakers,
the topics they will present on and how the roundtable will address the
themes of the symposium. We are particularly interested in roundtables
that put different orientations toward the future/ utopia or temporality
into dialogue and/or that bring together academic and practitioner
perspectives in relation to the core theme.
Paper
500 word abstract (including references) of the paper, clearly
explaining how the paper addresses the theme of the symposium and how it
will offer resources to think and work with for symposium participants.
Workshop session
500 word abstract (including references if appropriate) identifying the
topic of the session, the format that the workshop will take, the
previous experience or research that feeds into the design of the
session and the ways in which the session will contribute to the topic
of the symposium.
Poster/Pecha Kucha Session
The poster/pecha kucha session will enable new ideas and provocations to
be presented quickly as a basis for promoting further conversations. 500
word abstract (including references) identifying the topic, the fit to
the theme of the symposium, and the new ideas that the poster/pecha
kucha will aim to explore.
Open Space Session
We expect to host one or two Open Space sessions and invite proposals
for such a session from experienced facilitators of these processes, on
a topic that will be sufficiently generative to invite productive
discussions and new directions from participants in the symposium. 1000
word proposals should outline the experience of the facilitator in
running such sessions, the broad topic that will be proposed
Practice as Research
500 word abstract (including references) of the proposed piece, clearly
explaining how it addresses the theme of the symposium and how it will
offer resources to think and work with for symposium participants.
Please specify the space and time requirements for the piece.
Who can participate?
This event is open to any researchers and/or community collaborators who
have been funded through the Connected Communities or Care for the
Future Themes. The two day event will be free to participants.
Financial Assistance to participate
Bursaries covering travel and accommodation are available for up to 50
people to attend the symposium. Those requesting a bursary should
provide a short summary of reasons for needing this upon submission of
abstract. Bursaries will be offered up to the total available in order
of those with clearest financial need and in order to create a
sufficiently diverse range of participants in the symposium.
Peer review process
There will be a light touch peer review process by the steering
committee that aims to ensure that proposals all address the core theme
of the symposium. The purpose of peer review will also be to identify
productive connections and new thinking to encourage conversation and
dialogue at the symposium. Applications from early career researchers
and from those seeking to create interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral
connections are particularly welcome. We may also offer places for
participants to attend the event who are not successful in their
proposal for a particular session.
Conference Committee
Keri Facer (Chair, Leadership Fellow, Connected Communities Programme)
Andrew Thompson (Chair, Leadership Fellow, Care for the Future) Steering
Group: Michelle Bastian, Jo Vergunst, Steve Pool, Joe Smith, Sian
Sullivan, Richard Haynes, David Zeitlyn, Angela Piccini, George McKay
(Leadership Fellow, CC programme), Michael Northcutt, Johan Siebers,
Penny Evans
Dr A A Piccini / Senior Lecturer in Screen Media
Deputy PI: Productive Margins (Tues/Thurs); Co-I:
knowyourbristol.blogs.ilrt.org/ (Mon/Fri)
Rm 3.17 / Department of Film and Television / School of Arts
University of Bristol / Cantocks Close / Woodland Road / Bristol BS8 1UP
T: +44 (0)117 331-5087 (Mon/Weds/Fri) / +44 (0)117 954-6713 (Tues/Thurs)
/ 0775 834-8497
E: (a.a.piccini /at/ bristol.ac.uk)
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