[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP Online Conference Precarity in the Moving Image
Fri Jun 30 16:33:07 GMT 2023
*Here is the amended CFP Online Conference:*
*The Many Faces and Spaces of Precarity in the Moving Image*
**
*/“Another world is not only possible; she is on her way. On a quiet
day, I can hear her breathing.”/*
*/Arundhati Roy/*
**
*We are happy to announce the organisation of a one day online
conference for the Cinematic Precarity Research Network, to be held
Online (Oxford Brookes University, University of Exeter) to be held
online on _Thursday 14th of December 2023_*
Aim of this conference is to bring together academics working upon the
issue of precarity and its relationship with “the moving image”.
Definitions of precarity are multiple and, at times, conflicting. Many
of them share the intention to capture the dynamics and social
transformations associated with the neoliberal turn, and with the
mechanisms of gig-economy.
However, this term has assumed the most various significance and seems
to capture a broader social and affective predicament. Ecological crises
point at a precarisation of existence and of “the human” as such,
whereas the sense of individualisation and fragmentation produced by an
economy based on debt/credit connect with new worrying authoritarian
trends. A sense of political impotence is often associated with these
social forces that enact and reproduce processes of marginalisation,
which, in turn, favours always more violent mechanisms of exploitation.
However, mapping the various faces and spaces of precarity is also an
occasion to, at once, recognise, the multiplicity of a vulnerable world
and of its inhabitants, while, at the same time, highlighting new modes
of political subjectivation.
This call for papers, therefore, is intended to take into account the
polysemic and always renewing uses of the notion of precarity, while
also describing strategies to address the deadlocks it defines.
Precarity can refer to issues and problems of representation, analysing
the ways in which subjectivities on the screen are configured and how
their definitions intersect on the line of class, race, gender,
ability/disability. Precarity may consider new problems in film and
media production and distribution, helping in effectively assessing new
tensions between mainstream and ‘niche’ screen culture and/or strategies
to challenge such divisions. Understanding these mechanisms is also
connected with the possibility of tracing genealogies of precarity in
the multiple histories of cinema and audiovisual productions examining
hegemonic and counter-hegemonic trends in their developments. In this
sense, the discussion and critical evaluation of political and social
strategies aiming to address (or, on the contrary, standardise) the
precarious status of the industry are also of great interest. On a more
philosophical level, the precarious status of moving images in
contemporary artistic and affective infrastructure is also a theme to be
addressed and carefully assessed.
The hopeful tension inscribed in this call for papers is that studying
and analysing the many faces of precarity (from the climate crisis to
new forms of exploitation and marginalisation) is not limited to
sophisticated identification of the cracks and contradictions defining
our age; the work of analysis that we humbly hope to carry out together
is to use the power of moving images in order to ignite the critical and
passionate imagination of a new world responding to the alleged
inevitability of the current state of affairs.
*We welcome abstracts (max 300 words and bios of max 150 words/expected
length of 20 minutes) dealing with this list of topics:*
* *Precarity as a Strategy: The Neoliberal Governance*
* *Ecological Precarity and the Precarious State of the Human;
Eco-Fears and Necropolitics*
* *Precarious Subjectivities and Spaces on Screen at the Intersection
of Class, Gender, Race, Sexuality, Ability/Disability *
* *Precarious Citizenship: Border as Method*
* *Precarity and the Digital Economy; Digital Exhaustion*
* *Precarity, Class, and Identity (and its problems?)*
* *Discourses on Precarity, Social Activism, and New Unionism*
* *Precarity in Production, Circulation, and Participation in Media
Culture*
* *Political and Productive Strategies Responding/Resisting Dynamics of
Precarisation*
* *Genealogies of Precarity Beyond the Limits of Contemporaneity*
* *Precarious Narratives and Counter-Subjectivation*
* *The Precarious Status of Moving Images; New Forms of Circulation
and Spectatorship*
* *Precarity and the Affective Labour in Relation to Transfeminist
Thought*
* *Ways to Address Precarity in Terms of Public Policies*
*Deadline for abstracts 15^th of September 2023. Send abstracts and bio
at this email address:*
*(cinematicprecaritynet /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(cinematicprecaritynet /at/ gmail.com)> (organised by Dr Maria Elena
Alampi and Dr Francesco Sticchi)*
*
*
*Keynote Speakers: Prof. Guy Standing*
*
*
*Bibliographical References*
Burucúa, C. Sitnisky, C. (2018) “Introduction: Forms of the Precarious
in the Cinemas of the Americas” In /The Precarious in the Cinema of
Americas/. Burucúa, C. Sitnisky, C. (eds.). New York: Palgrave
Macmillan: pp. 1-15.
Ciccarelli, R. (2021), /Labour Power: Virtual and Actual in Digital
Production/, translated by E. C. Gainsforth. Cham: Springer Nature.
Federici, S. (2009) 2009. /Caliban and the Witch: Women, the Body and
Primitive Accumulation/, 3rd ed. New York: Autonomedia
Fisher, M. (2009) /Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?/.
London: Zer0 Books.
Fraser, N. (2022) /Cannibal Capitalism: How Our System is Devouring
Democracy, Care, and the Planet-and What We Can Do about it/. London: Verso.
Gago V. (2017) /Neoliberalism from Below: Popular Pragmatics and Baroque
Economies/, trans. Mason-Deese L. London: Duke University Press.
Guattari, F. (1995) /Chaosmosis: An Ethico-Aesthetic Paradigm/. trans.
P. Bayns and J. Pefanis. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Jaffe, S. (2021) /Work Won’t Love You Back: How Devotion to Our Jobs
Keeps Us Exploited, Exhausted, and Alone/. New York: Bold Type Books.
Kirsten, G. (2022) “Studying the Cinema of Precarity” In /Precarity in
European Film/, E. Cuter, Kirsten G. Prenzel, H. (eds.). Berlin: De
Gruyter: pp. 1-30.
Lorey, I. (2015)/ State of Insecurity: Government of the
Precarious/ fore. by Butler, J. London: Verso.
Marx, K. (1993) /Grundrisse: Foundations of the Critique of Political
Economy/, trans. and fore. by M. Nicolaus. London: Penguin Books.
Mbembe, A. (2019) /Necropolitics/, translation by S. Corcoran. London:
Duke University Press.
Mezzadra, S. Nielson, B. (2019) /The Politics of Operations: Excavating
Contemporary Capitalism/. London: Duke University Press.
Morini, C. (2010) /Per amore o per forza. Femminilizzazione del lavoro e
biopolitiche del lavoro/ fore. by Judith Revel. Ombre Corte: Verona.
O’Shaughnessy, M. (2022) /Looking Beyond Neoliberalism: French and
Francophone/
/Belgian Cinema and the Crisis/. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University press.
Piketty, T. (2014) /Capital in the Twenty-First Century/ trans. By
A. Goldhammer
<https://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=dp_byline_sr_book_2?ie=UTF8&field-author=Arthur+Goldhammer&text=Arthur+Goldhammer&sort=relevancerank&search-alias=books-uk>.
London: Harvard University Press.
Robinson, C. J. (2021) /Black Marxism: The Making of the Black Radical
Tradition/ fore. By R. D. G. Kelley and preface by C. J. Robinson, D.
Sojoyner, and T. Willoughby-Herard. London: Penguin.
Sassen, S. (2014) /Expulsions: Brutality and Complexity in the Global
Economy/. London: Harvard University Press.
Standing, G. (2011) /The Precariat: The New Dangerous Class/. London:
Bloomsbury.
Stimilli, E. (2019) /Debt and Guilt: A Political Philosophy/. London:
Bloomsbury
---------------
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/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]