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[ecrea] CFP: "Medium, Immediacy, Intermediality" (_Postmodern Culture_, June 1, 2012)
Thu May 17 17:32:51 GMT 2012
Dear all,
here a quick reminder for an upcoming CFP for a proposed special issue
of /Postmodern Culture/ entitled "Medium, Immediacy, Intermediality." I
am also pasting the text of the CFP below. Feel free to circulate widely.
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/postmodern_culture/v021/21.3.article.html
best,
Mathias
--
CFP: “Medium, Immediacy, Intermediality”
A proposed special issue of Postmodern Culture
We invite submissions for a proposed special issue of Postmodern
Culture entitled “Medium, Immediacy, Intermediality.” The issue aims to
gather ways of seeing the term “medium” beyond current disciplinary
frames. Rather than take the routes of literary or film studies, art
history or communication theory—and rather than see media as discrete,
pre-constituted categories of aesthetics or mechanics—we seek to put the
category of medium into question, and in doing so, to facilitate
approaches to the various mutually dependent media whose boundaries and
frames might now seem less conclusive.
What is this thing we call a medium? Is it an innate quality of
technology or art? Is it instead a function of knowledge, a tool by
which users, industries, or critics learn to categorize, show, or see
culture? Moreover, when does a medium become political? Is it political
when it identifies itself with a tradition of art or a timeline of
technological development? Is it political by virtue of its setting, its
audience, or its purported content? The simplest answer to these
questions would resolve itself through a medial ontology (like any of
those drawn from Heidegger or McLuhan, Lessing or Mumford, Kittler or
Habermas, Greenberg, Krauss, or Fried). We aim instead to expose the
risk of our own implication in the order of mediatic things; and to ask
whether a medium might be political, not in its application, but rather
from the very instant of its invention, as a composite of institutional
knowledges, objective materials, and subjective practices. “New media”
cannot just be the most recent entry in the narrative of technological
development. Rather, newness and development are mere mechanisms of myth
and control in a technophilic and technocratic culture, from which even
digital objects (such as gaming or computing) must be guarded. We
therefore seek contributions to a “media studies” that would not fully
coincide with “new media studies,” and that might consequently multiply
and undercut our concepts of medium.
We invite contributors to consider: what approach to media might
reinvent itself through its objects, rather than simply describe those
objects? What if the crisis in media studies were to occur not in the
interruption of media histories, but instead in the historical process
by which any medium comes to uphold a mediatic order of culture and art?
What if intermediality were not the periodically necessary joining of
one discrete medium with another one, but instead the moment in which
nothing joins? What if immediacy were not the fantasy of unimpeded
access to material reality, but instead the moment of critical clarity
that occurs when historical objects encounter regimes of thought under
which they don't quite cohere? What if a medium were not the name of
aesthetic distance or temporal lag but instead the condition by which
temporal and spatial categories become known? What kind of media studies
might survive the negation of inherited categories, and still identify
as a materialism of reading? What kind of reading might be possible if
medium specificity and medium ontology could be bracketed or swept
aside? What immanent knowledges might become legible, but only in the
suspension or exhaustion of extant disciplines? What methods might
foreground the political and epistemological factors that guide the
historical encounter between critic and object? And what theoretical
ligaments might tie the technological composition of media to their
social worlds and aesthetic effects?
Please send 500-word abstracts along with a brief bio sketch and contact
information by June 1, 2012 to Matt Tierney ((matthew_tierney /at/ brown.edu)
<mailto:(matthew_tierney /at/ brown.edu)>) and Mathias Nilges ((mnilges /at/ stfx.ca)
<mailto:(mnilges /at/ stfx.ca)>). Following initial acceptance, complete essays
should be submitted for review by November 1, 2012. The final decision
regarding the publication of all essays lies with the editors of
Postmodern Culture.
For further information on Postmodern Culture please see:
http://www.press.jhu.edu/journals/postmodern_culture/
<http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/postmodern_culture>
--
Mathias Nilges, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Department of English
St. Francis Xavier University
PO Box 5000
Antigonish, Nova Scotia
Canada, B2G 2W5
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