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[ecrea] cfp - Collective Creativity
Tue Apr 29 06:57:02 GMT 2008
Call for Papers
The Sydney German Studies Symposium 2009
Collective Creativity
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences - The University of New South Wales
The Goethe Institute Sydney
23 - 26 July 2009
Gerhard Fischer, University of New South Wales
(Convenor)
in co-operation with Sabine Rossbach (University
of Adelaide), Klaus R. Scherpe
(Humboldt-University Berlin) and Florian Vassen (Leibniz-University Hannover)
The Sydney German Studies Symposium 2009 is part
of a series of scholarly conferences sponsored by
the Department of German Studies at the
University of New South Wales since 1980. The
symposia are international, interdisciplinary
academic conferences devoted to current issues in
literary and cultural studies, with a focus on -
but not exclusively restricted to - contemporary
German literature and culture. Recent symposia
have addressed themes such as 'Writing since The
Fall of the Wall', 'Adventures of Identity', 'The
Play within the Play' or 'W.G. Sebald and
Expatriate Writing'; others were dedicated to a
critical analysis of aspects of the work of
Walter Benjamin, Hans Magnus Enzensberger or Heiner Müller.
The symposium is traditionally held bi-annually
on the last weekend in July and organized in
co-operation with the Goethe Institute Sydney
which also offers the venue for the event. In
2009, the topic of he Symposium will be 'Collective Creativity'.
CALL FOR PAPERS
The Sydney German Studies Symposium 2009
Collective Creativity
1. Preamble
Is there such a thing as 'collective
creativity? --- Two radical answers seem possible:
YES. All creativity is collective. No
creative person exists in isolation; all human
beings, artists and scientists in particular,
depend in their work and in their creative
self-expression on the contribution of others.
The original Western philosophical model of
creative enquiry is the Socratic Dialogue:
without question no answer (which in turn
provides a new question). For philosophers like
Martin Buber, the creative dimension arises from
what lies between I and Thou. In Mikhail
Bakhtin's literary theory, too, the creation of
meaning can only proceed in dialogic interaction.
Furthermore, all artistic creation aims at
outside presentation and recognition in a process of collective reception.
NO. Creativity is always individual.
While the social dimension of the Artist's and
the scientist's work is undeniable, it must
nevertheless be stated that the original creative
impulse, the intellectual spark that leads to
innovation, can only ever be found in the
individual mind. The original aesthetic model of
this concept is the Romantic Poet: alone and at
one with nature. While artists may be surrounded
by collaborators and while the technology of some
artistic or scientific production requires a
highly complex team effort, the final work is
always recognizable by the expression that an
individual personality has stamped upon it.
2. What do we understand by collective
creativity? Does a dialogic process always
already imply a collective creation? Does the
connection between art and ritual suggest an a
priori dimension of collectivity? Can we speak of
the notion of Gesamtkunstwerk in terms of
collective creation? Does it make sense to
discuss certain forms of hybridity (as in recent
discussions on postcolonial theory) in terms of
collective artistic experiences? In what way do
contemporary insights into psychological or
neurological aspects of creativity support or
dismiss claims of collective influences on
individual creative development? Similarly, what
can we learn from recent theories of memory (e.g.
Maurice Halbwachs and the notion of 'collective
memory')? Rather than focussing on seemingly
irreconcilable concepts phrased in terms of
traditional binary opposites, a contemporary
discourse on creativity might be more productive
if it searches out and questions the borders,
intersections or interfaces of artistic,
scientific and cultural practice where the
individual and the collective merge, come
together or confront each other. A central issue
of this debate might be the question of whether a
collective creative enterprise can deliver an
aesthetic or artistic surplus that exceeds an
individual effort. How and where can such a creative surplus be located?
3. Thus, it seems possible to think of a
multitude of answers which could apply to various
forms of collaborative ventures and
relationships: artistic or scientific
partnerships, ensembles, Dichterkreise (poetic
circles) and/or Dichterschulen, collaborative
friendships, artists' colonies, master workshops,
teams, ensembles, etc. One could mention as
examples the collectives of muralists (Mexico) or
the experiments in communal performances
characteristic of the 1960s. Indeed, there seem
to be particular historical sites for collective
creativity which may offer instances of
paradigmatic case studies: Weimar and Jena of
German Classicism, Vienna at the turn of the 20th
century, Paris of the Surrealists, the Frankfurt
School of the 1920s and 30s, the Living Theatre
in the 1960s, the 'Theatre of Development' of P.
Freire or the theatre of Augusto Boal .
4. Historically, the transitional period
around 1800 may be of special importance: it is
here that we witness the breakthrough of the
concept of the modern individual. The
disappearance of the old, feudal, rigidly
structured society (Ständegesellschaft) gives way
to a bourgeois, libertarian society in which a
radical new experience of the Self becomes
possible. The distinction between collective and
individual creativity thus seems a characteristic
feature of modernity, and it clearly reflects its
historical dialectic: the disappearance of the
communal bonds of old and of the coercive
tradition of a divine absolute leads to a
liberating experience of the Self, yet also
brings about new forms of social division,
isolation, dissociation and individualism along
with the desire for new forms of collective
experiences, solidarity, class consciousness,
communal and social collectivism. New forms of a
secular absolute (nation, class, race) and their
respective moral and political legitimation
emerge alongside attempts to formulate radical
positions of an aesthetic opposition in which
moral concept and argument are replaced in favour
of an absolute of artistic creation.
5. In the different arts and academic
disciplines, the question of collective
creativity needs to be considered according to
the specificities of the particular media. While
it is common to identify collective efforts in
areas such as the performing arts, in
theatre/opera or film/tv production, and in some
sciences (empirical or applied natural sciences,
social sciences), it is much less commonly found
in areas such the visual arts or in traditional
forms of writing, whether scholarly or creative.
Is there a "collective novel" or can we speak of
"collective writing" in general? Are there
"collective musical compositions"? In scholarly
writing, are collective research productions more
than the sum of individual contributions? How do
such collective enterprises function? How do they
come about? Where is the collective aspect
located? Can collective creativity generate an
aesthetic or scientific "surplus" that goes beyond an individual effort?
6. The very notion of collectivity is very
often seen as a political/ideological issue, with
collectivity assigned to the Left (see for
example the 2005 exhibition in the Kunsthalle
Friedericianum Kassel, entitled 'Collective
Creativity: Common Ideas for Life and Politics'
which heavily favoured a political notion of
collective artistic endeavour as resistance
against dominant capitalist art forms and as
performative critique of social institutions and
political structures). On the other hand, the
primacy of the individual is claimed as a domain
by the liberal/conservative Right. But are these
distinctions necessarily meaningful, particularly
in view of the disappearing relevance of
traditional systems of political fractionalism in
a postmodern cultural environment? More
recently, as the first Yearbook for Cultural
Studies and Aesthetic Practice (published by the
Department of Cultural Studies and Aesthetic
Communication at Hildesheim University, Germany)
suggests, scholars in cultural studies - at
Hildesheim and elsewhere - have focussed on a
concept of creative collectivity as an overriding
principle of organisation beyond the limiting
socio-political perimeters of 20th century
discourses. Taking as a cue the "explosive
expansion of computer networks" made possible by
digital technologies and the internet, the
editors of the yearbook note the increasing
interest in networking systems on the basis of
which
"'individuals','groups','projects','enterprises','masses'
and 'societies' organise their thinking and
learning as well as their [aesthetic as much as
social and cultural] practice". (Porombka,
Stephan, Wolfgang Schneider and Volker Wortmann,
eds., "Vorwort der Herausgeber", Kollektive
Kreativität [Jahrbuch für Kulturwissenschaft und
ästhetische Praxis, 1. Jg, 2006], Tübingen:
Francke Verlag, 2007, pp. 7,9; trans. G.F.).
7. The idea of collective artistic creation
invariably raises a number of other questions,
equally ethical and political, relating for
example to problems of ownership, recognition and
acknowledgement, hierarchy and control. Are the
notions of collectivity and hierarchy
incompatible? Does collective creation always
imply democratic participation? Who owns a work
of art created by a collective? Is there an
inherent contradiction between individual
ownership and collective imagination (e.g. in
Aboriginal art)? In traditional communal
societies the idea of individual artistic
creation or authorship may largely be irrelevant;
yet the production of such art today must take
account of the existing mechanisms of a market economy.
8. How do recent developments in media
theory and practice impact on the question of
individual versus collective creativity? In what
way are modernist concepts such as the ideas of
Benjamin (Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner
technischen Reproduzierbarkeit) or Brecht
(Radio-Theorie) relevant in an age of digital
creativity? Who owns a work of art created for
the internet? Is digital art or writing
inherently monologic or dialogic? How do digital
innovations (hypertext, chatting, virtual
environments) contribute to the creation of
collective consciousness? The openness of the
internet seems to transcend in principle the idea
of a work of art anchored in artistic
individuality. But can participation in internet
sites generate a sense of collectivity that
transcends the isolation of the individual Self
in front of the computer monitor, or does it only
create an illusion of communal identity?
9. In contemporary academic work, there
seems to be a paradigm change away from
individual research to team projects which are
often favoured in grant competitions. Similarly,
recent academic discourses clearly favour notions
such as interculturalism or multiculturalism,
interdisciplinarity or transdisciplinarity, which
per se appear to require forms of collective
practice. Again one could ask where is the
surplus generated by such collective enterprises?
And why is it that the idea of 'collective
creativity' does not seem particularly
fashionable nor at the forefront of current
discourses on today's creative or artistic avantgardes?
CALL FOR PAPERS. Offers of papers that address
the issues and questions suggested above are
invited. Papers are to be 30 minutes in length
(20 minutes presentation and 10 minutes
discussion). The deadline for submission of
proposals is 30 September 2008. Please send title
and a one page abstract (MS-Word) to
(G.Fischer /at/ unsw.edu.au) and (Florian.Vassen /at/ germanistik.uni-hannover.de).
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Nico Carpentier (Phd)
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Vrije Universiteit Brussel - Free University of Brussels
Centre for Studies on Media and Culture (CeMeSO)
Pleinlaan 2 - B-1050 Brussels - Belgium
T: ++ 32 (0)2-629.18.56
F: ++ 32 (0)2-629.36.84
Office: 5B.401a
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Katholieke Universiteit Brussel - Catholic University of Brussels
Vrijheidslaan 17 - B-1081 Brussel - Belgium
&
Facultés Universitaires Saint-Louis
Boulevard du Jardin Botanique 43 - B-1000 Brussel - Belgium
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