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[Commlist] CFP - Special Journal Issue: Gaston Bachelard's Material Imagination
Mon Aug 07 13:12:14 GMT 2023
Call for Papers: Special Issue - Gaston Bachelard's Material Imagination
We invite papers for a proposed journal issue, in English, that
critically engage Gaston Bachelard’s work on the material imagination
from a variety of disciplines and across disparate fields. We hope to
produce a focused, rigorous, and holistic assessment of the relevance of
Bachelard’s work. The collected abstracts will be incorporated into a
submittedproposal for an upcoming special issue of /Angelaki/.
Many of Bachelard’s best-known works—on water, air, fire, inhabited
space—try to understand how the elements, or the substances we encounter
and investigate as part of the “world” as such, come to take on psychic
significance, and how that psychic significance—that relationship to the
self—informs the intellect and its processes. In drawing our attention
to the intimate relationship between matterand the imaginary, his work
would seem to align rather neatly with psychoanalytic discourse. Yet
Bachelard’s theories, despite their continued significance for
historians of science, have never quite found their place in the
analytic canon, and his own commitment to analysis—for example, his
attitudes towards the works of Freud and Jung—shifts across his body of
work.
His exploration of poetic images in elemental matter and inhabited space
reveal the centrality of psychoanalytic concerns around the self. At
once an ecopoetics of matter, a repository of elemental images, and a
theorization of materialist phenomenology, they reveal Bachelard’s
penchant for the power of the human experience and imagination in the
face of the rational mind. For example, his “psychoanalysis of fire” –
from the book of this very title – is nothing but a “problem in which
objectivity has never held sway, where the initial seduction is so
compelling that it deforms the most rational minds and leads them to the
cradle of poetry, where daydreams are thought, where poems hide
theorems.” Images of elemental matter and inhabited space are understood
as intimate and essential embodiments of human emotions and experiences,
whether they reflect and house feelings of fascination and fear,
memories of childhood, our deepest desires and complexes, a sense of
growth or even death.
This productive tension between the poetic and the rational anticipates
new materialist and ecological discourses today in which
non-anthropocentric and posthuman sensibility displaces the centrality
of the sense of self and reorients the human relationship to our
environment in the face of global ecological crises. It is significant
to note, however, that Bachelard engages primarily with literary texts
by 19-20th century male European writers, like Mallermé, Baudelaire, or
Poe. How might we reconcile with, or appropriate, Bachelard’s
reorientation of the human-nonhuman relationship for today’s ecological
crisis and discourse today? The question of the “human” also leads us
back to that of psychoanalysis, of the ego and the self. How might
Bachelard’s exploration of the imagination and psychoanalysis relate to
the non-anthropocentric sensibility of the more-than-human world today?
On a different note, such questions on Bachelardian imagination,
psychoanalysis, and phenomenology call for an exploration of their
relationship to cinema, although Bachelard never prominently discussed
the medium. Not only do his elemental and oneiric images seem to mimic
cinematic experiences, he also conceptualizes temporality in a
remarkably cinematic approach: Bachelard’s time is a continuous flow of
horizontal clock-time and vertical burst of rhythmic force, united in
poetic imagination. What is the relationship between Bachelardian
imagination and cinema? How does his writing compare to his
contemporaries who did write of cinema, like Bergson or Epstein? What
would a Bachelardian poetics of cinema look like?
For this special issue, we welcome essays that explore the significance
and the relevance of Bachelard’s work in three distinct – but related –
areas.
1.
We welcome papers that take up Bachelard’s relationship to
psychoanalysis, both in terms of his place in the history of the
discipline and his usefulness for contemporary applications of
psychoanalysis. One of Bachelard’s best-known provocations, in The
Poetics of Space, is that the daydream, rather than the dream, is a
worthy site of investigation, both in its content and its form. Is
his psychoanalysis, then, merely a Freudian project displaced, or is
it something else entirely? What might his conviction that
“psychoanalysis…would form a useful basis for all objective studies”
have to offer psychoanalysis as it stands in relation to psychiatry,
for example? Is there a consistent sense of the “human” or the
“subject” to be found in his body of work whatsoever?
2.
We invite papers that address Bachelardian imaginations in relation
to the ecological. His repositories of the four matters reorient how
we consider the continuum between the human and the non-human world.
What kind of Bachelardien imagination of matter can we conjure in
today’s images, fictional texts and otherwise, when our
psychosensory experience of the world is vastly different from that
of Bachelard’s time? What is at stake when we do so?
3.
While we are open to papers that explore texts regardless of medium,
we are particularly interested in papers that explore the cinematic
significance of Bachelard’s theories. We welcome essays that
directly engage with specific films or directors, or discussions of
a specific theoretical orientation or sensibility that is cinematic.
Papers may explore cinematic elements in Bachelard’s work even in
absence of specific film texts: for example, how might we think
about his notions of “vertical time,” “instant,” “duration,” in
relation to cinematic conceptualizations of time? In what ways does
Bachelard’s imagination of matter and bodies reveal cinematic matter
and bodies anew?
Please send a 300 word abstract of your paper and a brief bio, or any
questions, to bachelardspecialissue2023@gmail.comby Monday, August
14. No payment from the authors will be required.
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