[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[ecrea] ASCA Workshop 2019: Realities & Fantasies
Fri Sep 21 16:49:58 GMT 2018
*ASCA Workshop 2019: Realities and Fantasies: Relations,
Transformations, Discontinuities*
10-12 April 2018, University of Amsterdam
Organized by Divya Nadkarni, Alex Thinius, and Nadia de Vries
Keynotes: Nkiru Nzegwu (SUNY Binghamton), Susanna Paasonen (University
of Turku), more TBA
“Fantasy is precisely what reality can be confused with. It is through
fantasy that our conviction of the worth of reality is established; to
forgo our fantasies would be to forgo our touch with the world.”
(Stanley Cavell)
The world of fantasy often serves as an escape from reality, its
limitations, and its many social, economic, and corporeal restrictions.
Reality, in turn, is often desired amidst the delusions of the
fantastic. However, the two are not always separate. For instance, while
social (trans)formations increasingly look like fantasy in more than one
sense, a serious turn towards fantasy seems to be ambivalent. A central
notion in earlier psycho-analytical culture critique, after being hyped
in Fantastic, Futurist and Utopist literature, today, fantasy as a
political means of critique seems to have become a delusionary
distraction. Yet, fantasy also seems to remain a booming aspect of
reality. Creative forms of protest, ideas of aesthetic resistances and
critiques are proliferating, and fantasies fomented by magical-realist
literatures, blockbusters, serials, pornography, and gaming in the
creative industries and digital media seem to be increasingly
intertwined with reality.
Some of the conceptual sites where reality and fantasy meet are
idealizations, utopias, phantasms, self-deceptions, anxieties,
self-fulfilling prophecies, and implicit biases realizing or enacting
themselves in reality; fantasies made real and realities made fantasy.
The boundaries between what is desired or feared and what is lived, what
is oneiric and what is substantial, what is true, and what is realistic
and unreachable are often blurred.
In critical and cultural theory, a continuous ambivalent desire for
reality appears, for example, in the discussions of New and Speculative
Realisms (Gabriel, Meillassoux), Agential Realism (Barad), political and
metaphysical Non-Ideal Theory, Critical Race Realism, or Gender
Neo-Realism (Mills, Alcoff, Haslanger, Mikkola), in the Ontological Turn
in anthropology (Viveiros de Castro, Venkatesan et al., Holbraad et
al.), and in the turn towards Authenticity and New Sincerity in
contemporary literary theory (Rutten, Vaessens and Van Dijk, Trilling).
In this workshop, we take on the continuous and renewed interest in the
real in its relation to fantasy, illusion, and imagination. Whereas
typically, debates on realism are focused on its contrast to idealism or
nominalism, we ask: What are the contemporary relations between
realities and fantasies? How do reality and fantasy speak to
intellectual imaginings and possible futures? What role can or should
fictions, fantasies, and idealizations play in social, political,
individual, and metaphysical change? We are interested in presentations
that take on the ways in which reality and fantasy relate, how they may
contrast, and how, and under what conditions, the one may transform into
the other.
The workshop addresses the kinship between realities and fantasies in
the following three respects: relations, transformations, and
discontinuities.
RELATIONS
How do realities and fantasies relate, and how are their relations
structured? Does one shape the other, or are they shaped by each other?
Is one more valuable than the other? What kinds of relations do they
enable? What are the relations between fantasies and the realities they
shape, affect, create, envision, or hide? The way we seek to influence,
manipulate, change or defy our present pertains to what kinds of
relations we envision between both ourselves, as humans, as well as
non-human beings. This, in turn, asks for the conditions that make
relations possible or impossible, satisfactory or unsatisfactory,
utilitarian or utopian, and for the hierarchies, power structures,
intentions and capacities that enable and delimit ways of relating.
Moreover, we are interested in examining conceptual, normative,
empirical, literary and artistic ways to address the relations between
and within fantasies and realities: how are social bonds and
interpersonal relations constructed and what are the interrelationships
between power, fantasy, actors, action, and forms of socio-political
embodiment?
TRANSFORMATIONS
We are interested in how transformations work, in socio-cultural,
political, theoretical and philosophical terms, and in the role that
realities and fantasies play in them. What are the transformations
within and between realities and fantasies? How does (or can) the one
transform into the other? What are the characteristics of the real and
the fantastical, and what concrete entanglements, interactions, and
interdependencies exist between them?
Transformations are happening everywhere, all the time. We can, for
example, see the transformative effects of gentrification, of modernity,
of reproduction, of colonialism, of aging, of war, of violence, of
translation, and of censorship. We can also see how resistance movements
and certain social practices actively transform the ways in which we
embody and experience. However, insofar as processes and acts of
transformation are about changing and giving rise to new forms, they
also seem to imply moments of direction and division, exclusion, or
rejection in order to define, group, or associate what can be
meaningful. We welcome presentations that analyze (both descriptively
and normatively) such transformations, or think about how to approach
transformative action, and confront the in-between spaces, possible
exclusions and hierarchies wrought by envisioned social, political, and
cultural transformations.
DIS/CONTINUITIES
What continuities and discontinuities are there between realities and
fantasies? How would rupturing the patterns of dominance (or the
sundering of continuity) become a means of effective transformation? How
can (un)productive collisions between reality and fantasy foster
socio-political, artistic, and/or cultural change? How do fantasies of
change and discontinuity hide or produce real continuities? And how can
existing continuities between reality and fantasy be rethought?
We are interested in presentations that (re)consider the role of
existing structures, practices, traditions, and forms in likely,
potential, or imagined transformations. From the perspective of
dis/continuity, we are particularly interested in the question of what
constitutes a continuum (for example, in a given tradition) and how such
continuums can be either broken or sustained.
We welcome papers from the fields of literary studies, media studies,
philosophy, arts, anthropology, sociology, and political theory that
speak to, but are not limited to:
The conceptual, normative, de facto, and/or imagined interrelations of
fantasies with realities
Ideal, non-ideal, materialist, or realist theories in their pragmatic or
socio-cultural environments
The role of realities and fantasies in socio-cultural critique, social
construction, and enactment
The dynamics of translation, e.g. in literature, media, material
culture, or theory
relations, transformations, and dis/continuities in artistic, literary,
poetic, theoretical, or musical forms
The body in the field of reality and fantasy
Interrelationships between power, fantasy, actors, action, forms, and
reality
How political fantasies (e.g. nationalisms) influence
social/interpersonal relations
How cultural fantasies give shape to new modes of expression,
understanding, institutionalizing, bonding, and resisting.
Fantasy as a political vehicle of real, unwanted, feared, or desired
social transformation
PRACTICAL DETAILS
We welcome proposals for academic and artistic contributions that speak
to the concerns of the workshop as outlined above. Abstracts (max. 300
words) and a short bio (max. 100 words) should be submitted to
(realitiesfantasies2019 /at/ gmail.com) before 15 October 2018. Submissions
will be responded to before 15 November.
Written versions of all papers will be circulated to all participants
before the workshop. All accepted speakers are required to submit a
3000-word paper before 15 February 2019. We kindly ask all prospective
participants to bear this in mind before submitting an abstract.
All questions about the workshop can be directed at the email address
mentioned above. More information will soon be announced on the
workshop’s official website: http://realitiesfantasies.wordpress.com
<http://realitiesfantasies.wordpress.com/>
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please
use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at
http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]