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[ecrea] Playfull Participation. Call for papers and practice-bases papers and projects
Mon Feb 23 16:38:58 GMT 2015
Conjunctions: Transdisciplinary Journal of Cultural Participation
I am happy to announce a double call for papers on "Playful
Participation". This issue will not only include academic papers, but
also practice-based papers and projects. It is our hope that this
initiative will further the dialogue between academics and the many
people who engage with participatory and playful processes and practices
in their everyday life and work.
Call for papers: Playful Participation
Deadline: Papers must be submitted by August 7, 2015
Play is a powerful source in people’s encounters with their everyday
life, surroundings and society. Furthermore, play is increasingly
intertwined with a range of different fields, from learning, exercising
and city planning to creative work relations. Identities are built
through playful interactions with games (Sutton-Smith, 1997) and social
media, playful learning engages students’ abilities and competencies,
and organisations use play as a motor for innovation and engagements.
The attempts to utilise playful behaviour in cultural, educational as
well as organisational contexts reveal tensions when rational social
organisation meets forms of playful participation that are less bound by
instrumental obligations. The tensions between play and socio-political
constraints have been a central theme for artists, designers and
architects throughout the 20^th century. The Dutch artist Constant
Nieuwenhuis, for instance, worked on his utopian city, New Babylon, for
over a decade. In New Babylon play was intended to liberate man from
work and the capitalist constraints of everyday life. In a similar vein,
Flanagan (2009) has shown how play and games have been used, as
‘critical play’, to disrupt and subvert systems of power and authority.
In relation to the lucid city, Quintin Stevens has argued that play
often involves ‘unfunctional, economically inefficient, impractical and
socially unredemptive activities which are often unanticipated by
designers, managers and other users’ (Stevens 2010). Following this, we
draw on the notion of counterplay as a ludic or playful vitality that,
as argued by Tom Apperley and Michael Dieter, holds transformative
expressions and ‘speaks directly to the disruptive creation of the new
through the reiterations of gaming’ (Apperley and Dieter 2010).
In this special issue we call for papers that investigate these inherent
contradictions of playful participation, for instance by asking the
fundamental question: What exactly is playful participation? But also:
How might playful encounters motivate participation? To what extent can
playful participation be utilised for e.g. cultural or educational
purposes without losing sight of ‘being playful’? And how does
playfulness challenge pre-established norms of participation? Papers
might address questions of playful participation in relation to fields
such as, but not limited to, playful culture, playful learning, playful
cities and playful organisations.
8,000-word papers must be submitted by August 7, 2015. Please refer to
www.conjunctions-tjcp.com <http://www.conjunctions-tjcp.com> for author
guidelines.
Call for practice-based papers and projects: Playful Participation
Deadline: Practice-based papers must be submitted by August 7, 2015
/Conjunctions: Transdisciplinary Journal of Cultural Participation /aims
to create a forum in which academics and practitioners can share
reflections regarding the possibilities and difficulties involved in
participatory practices. In this special issue we therefore seek
practice-based papers and projects that report experiences with playful
participation. Papers might report and document projects related to
fields such as playful culture, playful learning, playful cities and
playful organisations. Besides reporting on specific projects, the
papers might discuss and reflect on how playfulness is utilised with or
without success to motivate participation, as well as reflecting on how
playful participation can be evaluated: When is playful participation
successful?
Practice-based papers and projects can be in the form of 4,000-word
papers or primarily visual documentation.
Please visit www.conjunctions-tjcp.com <http://www.conjunctions-tjcp.com>
All the best
Camilla
Camilla Møhring Reestorff
PhD, Assistant Professor
Dep. of Aesthetics and Communication
Aarhus University
Jens Chr. Skous Vej 2, 1485/536
8000 Aarhus C
(norcmr /at/ dac.au.dk) <mailto:(norcmr /at/ dac.au.dk)>
// Editor-in-chief of Conjunctions: Transdisciplinary Journal of
Cultural Participation
www.conjunctions-tjcp.com <http://www.conjunctions-tjcp.com>
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