[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] Call for Proposals, ‘Territories of Political Participation. Public Art, Urban Design, and Performative Citizenship’
Sun Aug 02 08:02:08 GMT 2015
Call for Proposals, ‘Territories of Political Participation. Public Art,
Urban Design, and Performative Citizenship’ co-edited by Laura Iannelli
and Pierluigi Musarò and published by Mimesis International.
In the early 1990s, in Chicago, Mary Jacob curated “Culture in action”,
an experience of participatory public art which left a mark on the
contemporary artistic research and criticism. Over the last decades,
this “new genre of public art” has developed. In these “dialogical” and
“connective” aesthetics, public artists have involved citizens in
creative performances that aim to modify inhabitants’ perceptions of the
places where they live, to create new relations within and toward the
territory, and to transform (often temporarily) the physical spaces.
From ‘70s, and always more frequently, some processes and tools
developed by architectural research stress inhabitants’ involvement in
territorial planning, where the planners become triggers of a spatial
transformation which compares “projectual-citizens” and institutions.
Over the last half-century, local, national, and international policies
have been increasingly characterized by (more or less systematic)
attempts to involve citizens in the different levels of territorial
governance, sometimes with an investment on projects of spatial
transformation through participatory Public Art and Urban Design.
Moving from the outcomes of a two-years interdisciplinary research
programme on the Italian contemporary Public Art and Urban Design,
funded by the Sardinia Region (Italy), the book aims to shed light on
the different creative forms of civic engagement and actions proposed by
art and architecture around the “political” issues of territories.
Focusing on communicative practices that develop between city-places and
media-spaces, the book aims to offer a trans-disciplinary analysis of
Public Art and Urban Design as fields wherein new civic cultures and new
repertories of political participation can be activated around the
conflicts of everyday territories to test the vitality of contemporary
democracies.
In so doing, it will contribute to the scientific debate about
participatory governance as performative practice by documenting the
different forms of citizens’ involvement through contemporary forms of
Public Art and Urban Design. Subsequently, this aims to provide the
basis for critical reflection on participation and for reconceiving
participation as not merely representing citizens, but making them. As
such, the book aims to engage in a constructive debate with scholars
from the fields of sociology, cultural and media studies, political
sciences, arts, architecture, and urban planning.
An indication of the agenda of questions the issue proposes to address
would include:
Assuming that processes of planning and decision making related to urban
issues are increasingly characterized by attempts to involve the public,
what are the different participatory methods and tools that are
available to planners and policy practitioners?
How public artists and urban designers contribute to increase or
challenge the legitimacy of the planning process and the recognition
that planning processes should involve those actors that are affected by
them?
What happens when ambitions regarding citizen involvement in urban
transformation are put into practice?
What evidence is available about the ways in which participation through
art and urban design enhance learning processes, improve the quality of
decisions, contribute to empowerment, or promote social change and
democratic citizenship?
How do art and architecture can foster participation, inclusion and new
relations of communication that effectively challenge the power of
traditional practices of citizenship?
In which ways participatory art and urban design can contribute to
involve vulnerable, disadvantaged, marginalised or excluded categories -
such as migrants, homeless, disables, etc.?
How do participatory art and urban design can create new communicative
spaces and alternative social relations that are capable of
reconfiguring the relationship between belonging and citizenship?
How does it challenge ‘from below’ accepted social categorisations?
Proposals should be a maximum of 400 words and indicate not only the
proposed topic but the kinds of approach, methods and forms of
illustration/documentation/data to be employed. Proposals for shorter
items (including discussion pieces) as well as for conventional length
articles (max 45,000 characters, including spaces) are welcomed. The
deadline for receipt of proposals is September 20th 2015. Proposals
should be emailed to Laura Iannelli
((liannelli /at/ uniss.it)<mailto:(liannelli /at/ uniss.it)>) and Pierluigi Musarò
((pierluigi.musaro /at/ unibo.it)<mailto:(pierluigi.musaro /at/ unibo.it)>). Selection
for invitations to submit the paper will follow within 3 weeks of the
proposal deadline, along with details of the planned schedule. The
deadline for receipt of papers is March 2016. The book is expected to be
published on September 2016.
********************
Laura Iannelli is Assistant Professor of Sociology of Culture and
Communication at the University of Sassari (Department of Political
Sciences, Communication Sciences and Information Engineering), where she
presently teaches Political Communication and Participation. She is the
scientific coordinator of the project “To Govern Artfully. Process and
Tools for territorial participatory planning” (funded by the Autonomous
Region of Sardinia, Regional Law 7/07 - Promotion of Scientific Research
and Technological Innovation in Sardinia). Within the project “To Govern
Artfully”, the international conference on “Protest Participation in
Variable Communication Ecologies” has been organized in Alghero on June
2015. (http://protestcommunicationecologies.com).
39.347.5418597
(liannelli /at/ uniss.it)
Pierluigi Musarò is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University
of Bologna, Visiting Fellow at the London School of Economics and
Political Science, and Research Fellow at the Institute for Public
Knowledge, New York University. He has recently edited Lo spettatore
ironico. La solidarietà nell’epoca del post-umanitarianismo, Mimesis,
Roma-Udine, 2014 – italian edition of Lilie Chouliaraki, The Ironic
Spectator. Solidarity in the Age of Post-Humanitarianism, Polity Press,
London, 2012, and co-edited, with Paola Parmiggiani, ‘‘Beyond
Humanitarian Narratives,’’ Sociologia della comunicazione (2013), and
Media e migrazioni: Etica, estetica e politica del discorso umanitario
(Franco-Angeli, 2014).
39.348.7438202
(pierluigi.musaro /at/ unibo.it)
---------------
ECREA-Mailing list
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier and ECREA.
--
To subscribe, post or unsubscribe, please visit
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://homepages.vub.ac.be/~ncarpent/
--
ECREA - European Communication Research and Education Association
Chaussée de Waterloo 1151, 1180 Uccle, Belgium
Email: (info /at/ ecrea.eu)
URL: http://www.ecrea.eu
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]