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[Commlist] Recollections and Projections CFP: Representing Space, Place, and Liminality
Wed May 04 08:49:23 GMT 2022
Cfp from Intellect Books and Cape Peninsula University of Technology
...
REPRESENTING SPACE, PLACE, AND LIMINALITY: RECOLLECTIONS AND PROJECTIONS
Cape Peninsula University of Technology
Dates: 01-03 December 2022
Abstracts: 01 July 2022 (Round 1)
Nb. 05 October 2022 (Round 2)
Place: Virtual
https://amps-research.com/visioning-cput/
CALL:
The concept of liminal space has gained traction in contemporary
discourses on place and space, particularly since the proliferation of
placeless geographies (Ralph) and Non-Places (Auge) in the mid-20th
century. Liminal space, also understood as thresholds, transitional or
transformative spaces, have also become more manifest and, in recent
times, taken on peculiar expressions. Strict COVID 19 lockdowns in 2020,
that descended on us globally, necessitated the absence of people in
public space. These environments, void of human interaction, were
subject to a substantial amount of visual representation. In some
instances, these representations re-instated the spectator, the
photographer or filmmaker’s gaze of architectural and natural space and
place, and in others, they brought about the question of the
fetishization of abandoned space and ruination.
In turn, these modes of representation raise questions about space, as
an abstract concept, and place as a phenomenon with expressive
characteristics, meaning and significance – both issues that have long
been subjects of philosophical, architectural and aesthetic
contemplation. One such example is the visual representations of space
and place over the last century in the world of cinema. Examples include
cinematic representations of outer space, mental space, domestic space,
gendered space, and of places like cities, as seen in the City Symphony
in the 1920s.
In these, and other modes of spatial representation, space and place
have been explored as fundamentally diachronic. Today, however, the
past, present and future have become miscible through contemporary
visual media, with the environments we inhabit seen as less time-bound.
AI is arguably a perfect example, enabling us to visually represent our
memories, imagination and dreams of places – our oneiric places. In
doing so, it transports us to these worlds, past present and future, and
increasingly diminishes the subject-object dichotomy of our perceptions
of space and place.
Through exploring such questions and themes we encourage abstracts for
papers and creative contributions related to the representation of
space, place, and liminality, from both historical and contemporary
perspectives. We welcome papers examining intersections of place, time
and representation through a wide range of medias: painting,
photography, cinema, virtual realities, AI, architecture and more.
https://amps-research.com/visioning-cput/
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