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[ecrea] CALL FOR PAPERS: Culture in Disarray: Destruction/ Reconstruction
Thu Jan 29 10:18:40 GMT 2015
????????CALL FOR PAPERS:
Culture in Disarray: Destruction/ Reconstruction
King's College London CMCI Postgraduate Conference , 11-12 JUNE 2015
Keynote Speakers
Prof. Nick Couldry, Department of Media and Communications, London
School of Economics and Political Science
Prof. Peter Dahlgren, Department of Communication and Media, Lund University
Cultures are in disarray as never before assaulted and undermined by a
complex mix of alienating ideology and transformational technologies. Is
culture craving for a paradigm shift? Or is this state of disarray just
another moment of re-construction within culture? Looking at culture not
just as a concept, we can understand it as being permanently
reconfigured, in a constant process of adaptation and symbiosis with
social and economic developments, reflecting the Zeitgeist. The tide of
neo-liberalism has long since left the narrow realm of economics and
infiltrated not just the social realms of education, media, and arts,
but even the complex structures of everyday interaction – degrading the
construction of the self and the purpose of life. Digital technologies
are creating a disintermediation across all spheres of society
empowering and enriching the top 1% while the middle collapses as a
power law distribution polarise the mass from the political economic and
cultural elite. Moreover these technologies reinforce the neo-liberal
project affording it with the social techniques of pervasive
surveillance, endless assessment, targeting, grading, and the corrosive
obsession with competition and instrumentalism, consumption and
individualisation. Meanings are being co-opted, with ‘culture’ arguably
being replaced by ‘creativity’ in policy agendas, leading to disarray in
the definitions, discourses, and policy implications. Globalisation is
having a transformative impact on local cultures. The algorithmic
affordances of digitalisation reduce the human experience to one
dimensional formulaic constructions devoid of complexity or even culture
itself.
This analysis is imprecise, limited and does not pretend to do justice
the nuance and perspective required to fully appreciate this vast but
pressingly important subject. However, it highlights some aspects of the
multi-faceted dynamics that academics, policy-makers and activists are
struggling with across all cultural spheres. Our question then is what
are the reconstructions that oppose and go beyond this destruction? What
and where are the cultures of resistance and transcendence, the creative
policies and strategies, the structural bases of renewal and
re-empowerment, the micro-techniques and individual transgressive
statements of dissent? How can the vast cultural and economic resources
of our civilisation be socialised and humanised? How can the anarchistic
emergences we see on the periphery of established networks of control
and privilege be made effective and credible? How can this horizontalist
emphasis on participation and direct democracy create viable cultural
and political alternatives? And more profoundly but vitally, how can our
primal urge for creativity, authenticity, spontaneity, and co-operation
(not to mention joy and humour!) be harnessed to reconstruct a
rehumanised culture? Should we accept this condition of disarray as
automatically defining contemporary culture or as the point of departure
for a complex process of social reconstruction? Is creativity the magic
word to cure what culture cannot? Can it shake off the scent of elite
culture so that policy can be implemented? Will we keep changing the
buzzwords or do we need to return to the quintessential debate on culture?
The conference is unashamedly multidisciplinary, or even
anti-disciplinary. It calls for innovative statements which break down
the academic silos, which separate the culturalist, stucturalist and
rationalistic, the analytic from the normative, and the deconstructive
from the constructive. We are driven by a commitment to truly critical
thinking and innovative perspectives – to make a real ’impact’. To this
end we are calling for papers which address the above themes in ways
that challenge established categories and conventions. We encourage
unorthodox and provocative approaches. We are interested in ideas that
break out of assumed rationalities, which may outrage and appear
monstrous – that certainly won’t get in the top journals which make up
the ’dead heart’ of academia. After all isn’t this what creative
destruction always was and therefore must still be all about? In these
’end times’ times then uncensor yourself and make real that paper you
always wanted to write. The moment is now and remember, as Keynes said,
’in the long run we are all dead’!
We invite abstracts on the following themes but welcome papers that may
not fall directly within them, and feedback about how me may alter or
add to them.
? The Problems: analyses of cultures in disarray, common explanations,
causes, dynamics and configurations.
? Conceptual Frameworks: changes and developments in the basic notions
and questions about the idea of culture, ontology and technology.
? Specific Sites of Contention:
? The Arts / Creative Industries
? Education / Knowledge Production
? Media / Public Sphere
? Management / Entrepreneurship
? Politics / Ideology
? Economy / Culture of Money
? Urban Culture / Community Development
? Reconstructions: ideas, strategies, designs, and case studies of
emergent cultures that provide instruction and hope.
We welcome contributions until 15th of March 2015 (paper title, a
250-word abstract and author information - full name, institutional
affiliation and email address). Please send to:
(cmci-conference /at/ kcl.ac.uk) Notifications regarding acceptance will be
sent by 15th of April 2015.
Full paper (Max. 8,000 words) submission before 20th of May 2015
In case of queries please contact:
Agnieszka Widuto: (agnieszka.widuto /at/ kcl.ac.uk) Mengying Li:
(mengying.li /at/ kcl.ac.uk) Leandro Augusto Borges Lima:
leandro_augusto.borges (_lima /at/ kcl.ac.uk) Ya-Chiao Tu:
(ya-chiao.tu /at/ kcl.ac.uk) To keep yourself updated, please visit our
conference website:
https://thecmcisocialfactory.wordpress.com/cultures-in-disarray/
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