[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP The Aesthetics of Geopower:Imagining Planetary Histories and Hegemonies
Sat Aug 05 14:58:57 GMT 2023
*Call for Papers*
**
*The Aesthetics of Geopower:*
*Imagining Planetary Histories and Hegemonies*
4 & 5 April 2024, University of Amsterdam | Deadline for proposals: 15
October 2023.
*Keynote Speaker:*
**
Macarena Gómez-Barris
<https://vivo.brown.edu/display/mgomezba#All> (Brown University, author
of /The Extractive Zone: Social Ecologies and Decolonial Perspectives/,
Duke University Press, 2017)
For this two-day, single-stream, and in-person conference, sponsored by
the Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis and Dutch Research Council,
scholars are invited to explore how the human and nonhuman forces
shaping and emerging from the earth are articulated in art and cultural
practice.
*
If the earth was once passed off as a neutral backdrop to human life, in
the present age of ecological derangementit has reemerged as fraught
with relations of power and politics. In this context, cultural
theorists have put forward the rubric of /geopower /to conceptualize the
ways that power is exerted /over/ and /through/ but also /by/ the earth
(Clare 2013; Neyrat 2019; Yusoff 2018). Having long been entangled with
extractive, racial capitalism (Bain 2023, 1-2), geopower is becoming
especially visible amid climate change and discourses of the
Anthropocene. From proposals for solar geoengineering to legislation
extending legal personhood to ecological entities such as the Ganga
River, contemporary manifestations of geopower indicate how politics and
planetarity are colliding in complex ways that are increasingly defining
the present and will shape the future.
Extrapolated from Michel Foucault’s thinking of biopower, geopower—or
“geontopower” in Elizabeth A. Povinelli’s alternative
formulation(2016)—has been theorized along several overlapping
trajectories (Tola 2022; Luisetti 2019). For some, it primarily
signifies the “government of the earth” (Diran & Traisnel 2019, 44) and
implicates the technologies and tactics through which dominant subjects
frame and exploit not just terrestrial environments but those “defined
into nature” under patriarchal and colonial orders (Caputi 2020, 183).
For another strand of theory, which draws on posthuman philosophies of
life and matter (esp. Grosz 2008), geopower names the nonhuman forces of
the earth, which permeate, condition, but also often disrupt or imperil
humanly regulated environments (Clark 2011; Grosz, Yusoff, & Clark 2017).
Building on these developments, this conference explores how geopower
intersects with aesthetics, taken expansively as referring to art, film,
literature, and other forms of cultural practice, as well as sensed
materiality and embodied perception. Our premise is that the aesthetic,
far from being secondary or supplemental to the forces shaping the
earth, is centrally entailed and embedded in dynamics of geopower. This
can be seen in the visual construction of “the Earth system” as an
object of calculation, conservation, and control, or in scholarly,
literary, and filmic narratives of the Anthropocene, which cast
different human subjects as planetary culprits or custodians (Bonneuil &
Fressoz 2016). The earth’s inhuman forces, meanwhile, have a
transgressive vitality that often registers aesthetically and might be
articulated in artistic practice (Sheikh 2017). Such forces suffuse
cultural practice even when not explicitly thematized, whether because
some artistic scenes are economically aligned with particular regimes of
resource extraction (Acosta 2020) or because cultural works are
necessarily composed of planetary materialities, which precede and
exceed discursive or authorial framings of the aesthetic (Parikka 2015).
To probe the connections among power, planetarity, and the aesthetic, we
call on scholars, critics, and practitioners across disciplines to
reflect on how diverse formations of geopower are enabled and mediated,
but also challenged in cultural practice. How do conceptual, visual,
poetic, or narratological framings of the earth calibrate social
approaches to environments? Which marginalized perspectives can be
brought forward to develop alternative representations or
counter-histories of geopower? How is it imbricated with racializing,
(neo)colonial, and cisheteropatriarchal orders? And how might theories
of geopower be rethought by attending to its material manifestations or
reimagined in literary and artistic experiment?
In addressing these and other questions pertaining to the aesthetics of
geopower, contributors are invited to explore narratives, images, and
practices relating to any genre or medium, or events, discourses, and
materialities in any historical and geographical context. Possible
topics might include (but are not limited to):
—cross-cultural perspectives on/representations of the earth as an
aesthetic object;
—the significance of land and planetary forces in decolonial thought and
practice;
—the aesthetics of geoengineering, from speculation to design;
—climate fiction and narrative constructions of geopower;
—articulations of the earth’s materialities in the arts and cultural
practice;
—the role of mapping, remote sensing, and technological mediation in
planetary governance;
—the politics and aesthetics of “deep time” imaginaries;
—Embodied and multi-sensory apprehensions of planetary power;
—representations of resource extraction and new commodity frontiers;
—the aestheticization of planetary forces that exceed and transcend the
human;
—creative interventions that make visible the inequities and injustices
of geopower.
*Submission*
Please submit abstracts (max. 300 words for 20 minute presentations) and
a short biographical note (max. 250 words) to
(aestheticsgeopower /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(aestheticsgeopower /at/ gmail.com)> by 15
October 2023.
Kindly send submissions as a single pdf document of max. two pages. To
deepen mutual engagement, papers will be circulated a week before the
conference; each participant will be assigned a respondent and asked to
act as primary respondent to an assigned paper in return. Selected
papers will be invited for inclusion in an edited volume. No conference
fees will be charged.
Organized by *Dr Simon Ferdinand* (www.simonferdinand.com
<http://www.simonferdinand.com/>) and *Dr Colin
Sterling* (www.colinsterling.com <http://www.colinsterling.com/>) of the
University of Amsterdam.
*References*
Acosta, Santiago, /We Are Like Oil: An Ecology of the Venezuelan Culture
Boom, 1973-1983/ (PhD. dissertation, New York: Columbia University, 2020).
Bain, Kimberly, “Black Soil,” /Social Text/ 41.1 (2023): 1-19.
Bonneuil, Christrophe, and Jean-Baptiste Fressoz, /The Shock of the
Anthropocene/ (London: Verso, 2016).
Caputi, Jane, /Call Your “Mutha”: A Deliberately Dirty-Minded Manifesto
for the Earth Mother in the Anthropocene/ (Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2020).
Clare, Stephanie, “Geopower: The Politics of Life and Land in Frantz
Fanon's Writing,” /Diacritics/ 41.4 (2013): 60-80.
Clark, Nigel, /Inhuman Nature: Sociable Life on a Dynamic Planet
/(London: Sage, 2010).
Diran, Ingrid, and Antoine Traisnel, “The Birth of Geopower,”
/Diacritics/ 47.3 (2019): 32-51.
Grosz, Elizabeth, /Chaos, Territory, Art: Deleuze and the Framing of the
Earth/ (New York: Columbia University Press, 2008).
Grosz, Elizabeth, Kathryn Yusoff, and Nigel Clark, “An Interview with
Elizabeth Grosz: Geopower, Inhumanism and the Biopolitical,” /Theory,
Culture, & Society/ 34. 2-3 (2017): 129-46.
Luisetti, Federico, “Geopower: On the States of Nature of Late
Capitalism,” /European Journal of Social Theory/ 22.3 (2018): 342-63.
Neyrat, Frédéric, /The Unconstructable Earth: An Ecology of Separation
/(New York: Fordham University Press, 2018).
Parikka, Jussi, “Earth Forces: Contemporary Land Arts, Technology, and
New Materialist Aesthetics,” /Cultural Studies Review/ 21.2 (2015): 47-75.
Povinelli, Elizabth A., /Geontologies: A Requiem to Late
Liberalism/ (Durham: Duke University Press, 2016).
Sheikh, Shela,“Translating Geontologies” in/And Now: Architecture
Against a Developer Presidency: Essays on the Occasion of Trump's
Inauguration/, edited James Graham (New York: Columbia Books on
Architecture and the City, 2017), pp. 165-184
Tola, Miriam, “Geopower: Genealogies, Territories, and Politics,” in
/Handbook of Critical Environmental Politics/, edited by Luigi
Pellizzoni, Emanuele Leonardi, and Viviana Asara (Cheltenham: Edward
Elgar, 2022), pp. 564-76.
Yusoff, Kathryn, “The Anthropocene and Geographies of Geopower,” in
/Handbook on the Geographies of Power/, edited by Mat Coleman and John
Agnew (Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 2018), pp. 203-16.
URL:
https://asca.uva.nl/shared/subsites/amsterdam-institute-for-humanities-research/en/events/2024/04/geopower.html?origin=puxViJXMR4qLMjgCvCIKgA
---------------
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]