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[Commlist] CfP: Asian Futurisms - Linking Asia's Digital Imagination to the World
Thu Jul 15 09:59:14 GMT 2021
*Asian Futurisms - Linking Asia's Digital Imagination to the World*
**
*11-13 November 2021, Zhuhai, China*
*--***
Over the last decade new futurisms have sprung up in a number of guises.
Almost all of these go back to Marinetti's Futurism as a foil,
developing local versions of the belief that a better future is possible
through (digital) machines. However, this is also where the relationship
to Marinetti's ends. If he and many in his group worshipped the power of
(war) machineries, the new futurisms take social and cultural change
through digital means as their focus.
Most prominent among these new futurisms is Afrofuturism, but
Sinofuturism (or Red Futurism) is quickly catching up; other Futurisms
include Latinx futurism, Nipponfuturism and Gulf Futurism (Frangos,
2017). All these have at least three important common goals. First,
there is the attempt of decentering of European/Western attempts of
defining reality for all individuals and nations. “In the West and
elsewhere, the European, in the midst of other peoples, has often
propounded an exclusive view of reality; the exclusivity of this view
creates a fundamental human crisis.” In some cases, it has created
cultures arrayed against each other or even against themselves.
Afrocentricity’s response certainly is not to impose its own
particularity as a universal, as Eurocentricity has often done. Already
in 1998, Asante rightfully claimed that listening to the voice of the
subaltern “is one way of creating a saner society and one model for a
more humane world.” Secondly, there is the attempt to "distort and
undermine modernity’s signature narrative of development and progress,
holding up a mirror to its history of broken promises and thereby
challenging its imagined foreclosure of possible futures, […] the
project of interrogating the failure of the utopian promises of
modernity on both personal and collective registers." (Frangos, 2017).
This would also include the challenging of urban centres via rural
futurisms (Culp, 2018). Lastly, there are the attempts of presenting
concurring models for the future, including AI and post-human projects,
as viewed through the lens of divergent and cultural media.
Techno-orientalism appeared in the late 1980s and early 1990, spurred on
by the success Japanese technology began to have in the west, indicating
a shift in the geopolitical realities. Films, Manga and books such as
/Akira, Ghost in the Shell/, /The Three Body Problem,/ /Battle Angel
Alita/, and many others ushered in a new apparently superior oriental
understanding and application of technology. If before, the future had
been made in the USA or Europe, its production had now shifted eastward.
As Zhang (2017) relates, "the exterior scenes in Spike Jonze’s 2013
sci-fi rom-com, /Her/, were filmed in Shanghai’s Pudong district,
setting Joaquin Phoenix’s high-waisted trousers against the archetypal
Chinese metropolis cast as a future Los Angeles. More pithily, a
character in Rian Johnson’s thriller /Looper/ (2012) advises: ‘I’m from
the future: go to China.’” This point is made even more succinctly by
Lawrence Lek in his 2016 film /Sinofuturism/: "Sinofuturism is an
invisible movement. A spectre already embedded into a trillion
industrial products, a billion individuals, and a million veiled
narratives. It is a movement, not based on individuals, but on multiple
overlapping flows. Flows of populations, of products, and of processes.
Because Sinofuturism has arisen without conscious intention or
authorship, it is often mistaken for contemporary China. But it is not.
It is a science fiction that already exists.” And when it comes to
issues of gender, Lu Yang’s/Delusional Mandala, /reintroduces art moving
image creation as the catalyst for futurist’s aesthetic and imagination.
Last but not least, the philosopher Yuk Hui has recently been
propounding his world view as “Chinese cosmotechnics”, thereby
decentering western attempts of claiming sovereignty of technology and
proposing a /technodiversity/ to re-think modern technology by inventing
new directions and new frameworks.
It is the aim of this conference to investigate these science-fictional
techno-oriental tropes and broadly focus on the following questions:
* How to assess the fall-out of a hyper-globalised world, including
epidemics?
* How to explore race as a technology?
* How to think through future bodies and embodiment in a post-human
environment?
* How to reclaim the pride of one’s heritage?
* How to investigate how utopic and dystopic futurisms can engage and
deliver diversity?
* How to decentre Western discourses of the future?
* How to view the present from the future?
* How to explore the sharing of a common future (imagination)?
* How to help create alternate spaces beyond national borders and
urban spaces?
* How to imagine future genders along decolonial lines (e.g. Zairong
Xiang and Lu Yang?)
* How to think /technodiversity/ through art as a form of knowledge
production?
* How to re- think futurisms in the context of climate change?
* How to re- think science fiction as a form of knowledge production?
* How to re- think futurisms in the context of Artificial Intelligence
(AI), quantum computing or blockchain technology??
*Venue: *
**
*Beijing Normal University-Hong-Kong Baptist University-United
International College, Zhuhai, Guangdong, PRC.*
**
UIC is located in the warm winter holiday region of southern Guangdong’s
Great Bay Area, one of the most dynamic regions in the world and a
stone’s throw away from Hong Kong, Guangzhou, the futuristic Shenzhen
and Macau!
/Zhuhai/is a coastal city in Guangdong
<https://wikitravel.org/en/Guangdong> Province, China
<https://wikitravel.org/en/China>. Its name means /Pearl Sea/ stemming
from Zhuhai's location where the Pearl River flows into the South Sea.
It is a very popular tourist destination and nicknamed /The Hundred
Island City/, was voted “The Happiest City in China” and is an
ecotourism destination with clean air. It is unique in mainland China as
an at times pulsating, at times very serene holiday destination.
**
*Timeline, submission procedures and publication: *
**
*Submission of Abstracts*
*15 August 2021 *
*Notification of Abstract Acceptance*
*1 September 2021*
Please submit an abstract of no more than 300 words to Luciano Zubillaga
*((luczubi /at/ uic.edu.cn) <mailto:(luczubi /at/ uic.edu.cn)>)*or
Charlie Reis (*(charlie.reis /at/ xjtlu.edu.cn)
<mailto:(charlie.reis /at/ xjtlu.edu.cn)>)**.*
**
Conference presentations will be collected in the conference
proceedings. The best contributions will be considered for the
indexed/IAFOR Journal of Cultural Studies/and a book publication.**
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