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[Commlist] CFP "Dance and New Tech." Documenta Journal
Sun Apr 30 21:14:54 GMT 2023
*DANCE AND NEW TECH.*
*/ A.I., VR, MoCap, Blockchain and the new frontiers we are designing
for the field./*
*[Call for Papers for Ghent University's Journal DOCUMENTA]*
What are the new frontiers we expect for dance to break through, to draw
from, to reiterate, to simulate? Alongside this, what are the new
frameworks that we need to account for such transformations? The
digitization of dance or dance data is challenging the conceptual
frameworks championed by the humanities based on identity, meaning, and
representation. To which extent is it useful to employ previously known
approaches to dance and performance and when do they start limiting our
vision? But if identity and its markers, encompassed by their
meaning-making potential, are not adept at contending with A.I.
generated dancers, V.R. environments, or gestures encrypted in the
blockchain, then what is? This is the blank that we expect proponents to
fill in; by sharing their own case studies/processes/reflections on
dance and new technology; along with the new frameworks that arise to
account for them.
Katherine Hayles (2018) suggests that when working with new
technologies, instead of thinking of representation or identity, we
think of patterns, which for the topic of this CFP implies thinking of
the specific lineages that gestures trace from human bodies to machines
and back; either as kinemes or data. For this call, we are interested in
building a publication that combines aesthetic, scientific, cultural,
and experimental gazes that have both, human movement and digital
technologies at their center, without reifying the known boundaries
between these two domains but rather allowing us to understand how they
intersect/interpolate one another. To be able to grapple with the
palpable effects of technology across bodies, machines, devices, flesh,
land, creative routes, and research, we signal toward “material
thinking” (Hayles, 2018) to allow proponents to unveil how their
processes traversed or arrived at/through/to the digital, as part of a
broader continuum of “digital-carnalities” (Citro, 2021) either for
pedagogic, artistic, interactive, or academic purposes, more broadly.
Simultaneously, the inclusion of the dancing body in the digital does
not happen in a socio-political vacuum; because of this, there is a
continuous calling to account for the racial and gender differentials
that persist, as bodies and their movement become digitized. In a
dystopian turn, A.I. facial recognition models keep misgendering black
women, video game companies keep misappropriating the dance steps of
BIPOC communities for profit, and fem-presenting users within the
metaverse keep experiencing sexual harassment at disproportional rates.
Therefore, without suggesting the advent of a post-racial, post-gender
condition, dance in the digital space is the perfect case study to
re-think sociability and facilitate hinging conceptual jumps.
We welcome submissions of a maximum of *8.000 words in the form of
argumentative essays, performative writings, and non-conventional
contributions*, around the following topics:
·Generative choreographic methods on-and-off chain
·A.I. dancing models
·(Re)configuration of subjectivities within VR environments
·Transmission/safeguarding of dance mediated by digital technology
·Affects impacting bodies and devices, such as digital-carnalities
(Citro, 2021)
·Instrumentalizing digital technologies to highlight and protect
indigenous/traditional creativity
·Critical approaches to the cosplay of racial and gender markers
afforded by avatarization in videogames and other virtual environments
·“Encryption” of the dancing bodies through NFT and blockchain architectures
·Political and legal consequences of digitizing and reproducing
dance as data
·Rhythm and ecological affordances across human and virtual bodies
·Datafication of dance and cognitive automation
·Re-framing human-computer interactions through human-and more
than-human cosmologies
·Fictional or speculative approaches to dance and new tech.
·Radical uses of new technologies and the body to resist fascism,
imperialism, and war
·Visceral data and big data in dance
·Establishment of new economies for communities of dance
practitioners through Web 3
·Erotization of virtual dancing avatars, revisited economies of desire
·Queerying possibilities afforded by the incursion of the dancing
body in the digital
·Composite-like dancers made out of bits of data retrieved from
different bodies
*Guidelines for Submissions*
Proposals should be between 6.000 to 8.000 words and will be accepted in
the form of editable files made with a word processor software
(Microsoft Word preferred) by email to (jpove001 /at/ ucr.edu)
<mailto:(jpove001 /at/ ucr.edu)>. Please include your surname in the file name
of the main submission document and a separate document including a
short biography for the author(s) (approximately 100 words) and the
title of the submission.
Submission of a proposal will be taken to imply that it presents
original, unpublished work not under consideration for publication
elsewhere. Before submitting a proposal, we encourage you to visit our
website (www.documenta.ugent.be <http://www.documenta.ugent.be>) and
familiarize yourself with the journal (MLA style).
Drafts should be anonymized and contain the following: title, abstract,
main text, endnotes, and bibliography. Proposals should not exceed the
8.000 word count; notes and bibliography excluded.
Submission of images and other visual material is welcome. It will be
the author's responsibility to obtain permission for copyright and to
use the material in print. Authors may find further information on
permissions and copyright here:
https://documenta.ugent.be/about/submissions
<https://documenta.ugent.be/about/submissions>.
The first step upon receipt of the paper will be a preliminary review by
our editorial board committee. If the paper passes this stage, it will
be sent for peer review. DOCUMENTA does not charge fees from authors nor
proponents.
*DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSIONS: JULY 10, 2023.*
*References: *
Citro, S. (2021). Intercultural Reflections on Digital-Carnalities in
Dance In Hayde Lachino et al. (eds.) Dance in Times of Crisis and of
Re(ex)istence/Resistance. UNAM.
Hayles, N. K. (2018). How we became posthuman: Virtual bodies in
cybernetics, literature, and informatics (2nd ed.). University of
Chicago Press.
Lewis, J. E., Arista, N., Pechawis, A., & Kite, S. (2018). Making Kin
with the Machines. Journal of Design and Science.
https://doi.org/10.21428/bfafd97b <https://doi.org/10.21428/bfafd97b>
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