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[ecrea] Mapping in Arts and Humanities Research: Workshops and Symposium
Thu Jun 08 17:55:22 GMT 2017
MAPPING IN ARTS AND HUMANITIES RESEARCH
TWO WORKSHOPS AND A SYMPOSIUM
June 14th, 21st, and 27th, 2017
Jointly hosted by the Department of Film Studies, King’s College London
(KCL) and the Centre for Multidisciplinary and Intercultural Inquiry,
University College London (UCL)
Generously funded by the London Arts and Humanities Partnership
RATIONALE
Theories and practices of mapping have been increasingly prominent and
influential in arts and humanities research in the past twenty years.
The histories of art, architecture, film, literature, and other cultural
forms have been retold from geographical, spatial perspectives, across
disciplinary lines, by Giuliana Bruno, Denis Cosgrove, Tom Conley,
Thomas Da Costa Kauffmann, Rob Kitchin, Franco Moretti, Ricardo Padron,
and Todd Presner, to name just a few. Drawing on rich influences in
geography, sociology, architecture and urban planning, these scholars
and others have used maps to rethink art, culture, and the humanities,
or vice versa. As such, mapping has become one of the key tools by which
arts and humanities researchers have collaborated and innovated, and by
which they have interacted with the social sciences.
Many arts and humanities researchers today seek to incorporate maps and
mapping in their research, and yet provision of training and
opportunities for critical reflection are rare in this specific
cross-disciplinary area. This is despite the fact that digital
technologies have made mapping increasingly feasible and sophisticated,
in technical terms, even for those without specialist cartographic
training. Mapping has also become increasingly informative and rewarding
methodologically – e.g. what Todd Presner calls “thick mapping” - as a
complement to, or, for some, even a replacement for, certain, more
traditional aspects of research.
Accordingly, in June 2017, KCL and UCL will jointly host a series of
workshops and a symposium in order to provide opportunities for
experimentation with, and reflection on, maps, mapping, their usefulness
and value, and the complex and challenging issues they raise.
THE WORKSHOPS
Workshop 1) Wednesday, June 14th, 2017, 10am-3pm, King’s College London,
Strand, London WC2R 2LS
Room K4U.12, King’s Building, Strand Campus
Workshop 2) Wednesday, June 21st, 2017, 10am-3pm, University College
London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT
Room to be confirmed
These workshops will be aimed primarily at current PhD students in any
arts and humanities or social science discipline, from across the UK,
but with a limited number of places also set aside for postdoctoral
researchers and others. To attend the workshops, it is necessary to
register in advance, and it is also necessary to sign up to attend both
workshops (rather than one or the other) as they are designed and will
be delivered as a pair. No special expertise in mapping techniques or
map analysis will be required. PhD students at any stage of their
studies may reserve a place, whether they have a lot of experience with
maps or very little.
The workshops will be led by the event co-organizers, Dr Mark Shiel at
King’s on June 14th and Dr Roland-François Lack at UCL on June 21st. In
these, Shiel and Lack will present their own research with maps, but
they will invite those in attendance to pre-circulate and bring along
and share maps with the group. The workshops will be practical,
interactive and computer-based, relying on demonstrations and small
group work. Hence, the workshops will provide an opportunity to present,
examine, speculate on, and discuss a wide variety of maps in detail,
benefiting from a variety of case studies and interpretations.
Attendance at the workshops is free of charge and light lunch will be
provided. There is a limit on the number of places in the workshops - a
maximum of 40 people, but some places are still available. Registration
in advance is required.
Please register for the workshops here:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/mapping-in-arts-and-humanities-research-workshop-1-kcl-tickets-33363824096
THE SYMPOSIUM
On June 27th, 2017, KCL and UCL will co-host a one-day symposium with
the aim of examining the use of maps in arts and humanities research and
connections between mapping in the arts and humanities and in the social
sciences. The symposium will be open to all. Providing an opportunity to
reflect on the strengths, limitations, and methodological challenges and
problems posed by maps and mapping, this symposium will feature 8 short
papers by a variety of scholars and a keynote address.
The keynote address will be given by Professor Shannon Mattern of the
New School for Social Research, in New York. Mattern is the author of
The New Downtown Library: Designing with Communities (2017) and Deep
Mapping the Media City (2015), both published by University of Minnesota
Press, as well as numerous journal articles and book chapters.
(http://www.wordsinspace.net/shannon/ )
The Symposium will be free of charge, although advance registration is
required at the Eventbrite page below (please note the workshops and the
symposium have separate Eventbrite pages and it is necessary to register
for both separately, if you intend to attend all events).
Symposium Programme
Tuesday, June 27th, 2017
Venue: G22 Lecture Theatre, Pearson Building (North East Entrance), Main
Quad, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT
0930-1000 Welcome and opening comments, Roland-François Lack (UCL) and
Mark Shiel (KCL)
1000-1130 Panel 1
• Karen Smith (PhD student, Film Studies, KCL) – “Mapping London’s ‘Flea
Pits’ from the 1970s to the 1990s”
• Anna Viola Sborgi (PhD student, Film Studies, KCL) – “Mapping
regeneration: London’s Docklands and screen media”
• Jina Lee (PhD student, University of the Arts, London) – “Drawing ‘New
Maps’ of New Malden: Ethnographical enquiry into the Joseonjok people by
means of drawing practice”
1130-1150 Coffee break
1150-1300 Keynote Address, Shannon Mattern (Associate Professor of Media
Studies, New School for Social Research, New York), “Mapping’s
intelligent agents: From machine learning to echolocation”
1300-1400 Lunch
1400-1530 Panel 2
• Maud Borie (Postdoctoral Research Associate, Geography, KCL) –
“Visualizing the intangible? Exploring the potential of GIS and creative
practices to map (for) resilience”
• Michele Ferretti (PhD student, Geography, KCL) – “Invisible Cities:
Repurposing machine learning and coding practices in the context of
spatial data”
• Arooj Khan (PhD student, Sociology, University of Birmingham) –
“Mapping children’s lives and geographies: how far have we come?”
1530-1550 Coffee break
1550-1710 Panel 3
• Rod Stoneman (Professor Emeritus, John Huston Centre for Film and
Digital Media, National University of Ireland Galway) – “A New map of Rome”
• Maurizio Cinquegrani (Lecturer in Film, University of Kent) –
“Cinematic landscapes of the Holocaust in Poland”
1710-1750 Roundtable
1750-1800 Closing comments and thanks
To register for the symposium, please visit:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/mapping-in-arts-and-humanities-research-symposium-tickets-33364145056
ABOUT THE ORGANISERS
Mark Shiel is Reader in Film Studies and Urbanism in the Department of
Film Studies at King’s College London. He has published widely on the
subject of cinema and cities, most recently his monograph Hollywood
Cinema and the Real Los Angeles (Reaktion Books/University of Chicago
Press, 2012).
Roland-François Lack is a Senior Lecturer in the French Department at
UCL, where he teaches nineteenth-century literature and
twentieth-century film. He is the author of numerous works on
Lautréamont, Kristeva, Tel Quel, and the nouvelle vague, and he is the
author and curator of the celebrated website cinetourist.net
The organisers gratefully acknowledge the support of the London Arts and
Humanities Partnership, which is in turn funded by the Arts and
Humanities Research Council.
These events will also form part of the first year’s activities of the
new London Urban Media Research Network, a collaboration of KCL, UCL,
the LSE, and Birkbeck College aimed at coordinating and increasing
research activity on the interaction of cities and media, broadly defined.
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