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[Commlist] MIRAJ 10:1/2 CfP: Artists’ Moving Image, Ecology and Future Practices
Tue Jul 06 22:06:18 GMT 2021
*/The Moving Image and Art Review Journal/ (MIRAJ) Issue 10:1/2
/Artists’ Moving Image, Ecology and Future Practices/*
*Call for Papers | * Extended Deadline*: 1 September 2021*
In his text ‘The Three Ecologies’, Guattari proposes three
interconnected ecologies: the environment, social relations and
human subjectivity, arguing that the ecological crisis that
threatens our planet and ourselves is the direct result of the
boundless expansion of global capitalism. This notion of Ecology
encompasses the environment, the social, the psychological and political
and asks us to rethink and redefine new concepts in response to the
challenges we now face as moving image artists, researchers and academics.
Issue 10:1/2 aims to imagine and examine how practices in artists’ film
and video can be transformed by a dedicated attention to notions of
the Ecological in its many expanded forms. We invite scholars, artists,
writers, film-makers and curators to explore what our role can be in
engaging with new ways of thinking and making in response to the climate
emergency.
This issue of MIRAJ will therefore address key areas of
critical concern, from the culpability of the moving image industry’s
extractive and management practices, to the rich potential of
the artistic and film-making community to shape, challenge and disrupt
dominant disciplinary knowledge and habitual practices and its role in
the practical organisation of other futures.
This issue also aims to look beyond western-centred responses to
environmental and ecological challenges as our global ecology consists
of impact at local level to people working in broad
We invite scholarly articles and essays that:
* examine how dominant disciplinary knowledge and habituated practices
of the moving image can be challenged and reimagined;
* explore the value of transdisciplinary and epistemological
frameworks to offer new perspectives and models of practice;
* rethink the role of medium and moving image materiality;
* assess the transformative role of artists, film-makers and creative
practitioners to both reimagine and address current climate challenges;
* consider how we look beyond western-centred responses to
environmental and ecological challenges with new and developing
networks in the Caribbean, North America, Europe and the global south;
* explore how artists, curators and film-makers might develop new
standards and processes within a sustainable practice;
* examine how we can learn from past and present practices in
experimental film and video art;
* find new models of interdisciplinary and collective responses to
imagine other worlds.
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
/The Moving Image Review & Art Journal /(MIRAJ) is the first
peer-reviewed publication devoted to artists’ film and video, and its
contexts. MIRAJ offers a widely distributed international forum for
debates surrounding all forms of artists’ moving image and media
artworks. It is published twice a year in print by Intellect Books, and
has its editorial base at the Centre for Research in Education, Art and
Media (CREAM) at the University of Westminster.
The editors invite contributions from art historians and critics, film
and media scholars, curators, and, not least, practitioners. We seek
pieces that offer theories of the present moment but also writings that
propose historical re-readings. We welcome essays that:
* re-view canonical works and texts, or identify ruptures in the
standard histories of artists’ film and video;
* discuss the development of media arts, including the history of
imaging technologies, as a strand within the history of art;
* address issues of the ontology and medium-specificity of film, video
and new media, or the entanglement of the moving image in a
‘post-medium condition’;
* attempt to account for the rise of projected and screen-based images
in contemporary art, and the social, technological, or
political-economic effects of this proliferation;
* investigate interconnections between moving images and still images;
the role of sound; the televisual; and the interaction of the moving
image with other elements including technology, human presence and
the installation environment;
* analyse para-cinematic or extra-cinematic works to discover what
these tell us about cinematic properties such as temporal
progression or spectatorial immersion or mimetic representation;
* explore issues of subjectivity and spectatorship;
* investigate the spread of moving images beyond the classical spaces
of the cinema and galleries, across multiple institutions, sites and
delivery platforms;
* consider the diverse uses of the moving image in art: from political
activism to pure sensory and aesthetic pleasure, from reportage to
documentary testimony, from performativity to social networking;
* suggest new methods of theorizing and writing the moving image.
We welcome work that intersects with other academic disciplines and
artistic practices. We encourage writing that is lucid without
compromising intellectual rigour.
We publish the following types of writing: scholarly articles (5000–8000
words); opinion pieces, feature articles and interviews (3000-4000
words); review essays of books, individual works, exhibitions and events
(2500-3000 words). Scholarly articles will be blind peer-reviewed and
feature articles and review essays can be peer-reviewed on request. All
writings should propose a central idea or thesis argued through a
discussion of the work under review.
Articles submitted to MIRAJ should be original and not under
consideration by any other publication, including online publications.
We do not publish articles by artists about their own work, nor reviews
by curators or venues about their own exhibitions.
All submissions should be in English and adhere to the Intellect Style
Guide
(https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-editors-and-contributors#style-guide
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/journal-editors-and-contributors#style-guide>)
Please submit completed manuscripts only. Send all contributions and
proposals by e-mail in DOC or RTF format to the Editorial Assistant:
(miraj /at/ cream.ac.uk) <mailto:(miraj /at/ cream.ac.uk)>
Masthead:
Editors: Michael Mazière, Lucy Reynolds
Centre for Research in Education, Arts and Media (CREAM), University of
Westminster
Reviews Editor: Maria Walsh, University of the Arts, London
Assistant Editors: Lauren Houlton, Matthias Kispert, Sarah Niazi
Associate Editors:
Sean Cubitt, Goldsmiths, University of London; Eu Jin Chua, Unitec, New
Zealand; Jonathan Walley, Denison University, USA, Rachel Moore,
Goldsmiths College
The International Advisory Board includes:
Ian Christie; Stuart Comer; Maeve Connolly; David Curtis; T.J. Demos;
Thomas Elsaesser; Catherine Elwes, Catherine Fowler; Amrit Gangar; David
E. James; Laura Mulvey; Mark Nash; Michele Pierson; Pratap Rughani,
Catherine Russell, Colin Perry, Federico Windhausen
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