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[ecrea] Cosmographies CfP deadline 25 April 2014
Sat Apr 12 14:29:05 GMT 2014
Call for Papers: Cosmo-graphies: Textual and Visual Cultures of Outer Space
2-day conference, Falmouth University 24-25 July 2014
Supported by the British Interplanetary Society
Keynote Speakers:
* Prof. Chris Welch – Professor of Astronautics (ISU, Strasbourg),
and Vice-President of the British Interplanetary Society
* Prof. Philip Gross – Professor of Creative Writing (University of
South Wales), T. S. Eliot prizewinner and author of Deep Field (2011)
Organisers:
Dr. Niamh Downing (Senior Lecturer in English and Writing); Dr. Dario
Llinares (Senior Lecturer in Film); Dr. Sarah Arnold (Senior Lecturer in
Film)
In his introduction to Space Travel and Culture (2009), David Bell
suggests that the neglect of ‘outer space’ in the humanities and social
sciences is in part due to the negative stance towards the technological
utopianism of the mid-twentieth-century ‘space race’, where ‘Apollo
stands now as a future that never happened, or a history that seems not
to connect with our present’ (4). For James Hay the emergence or
invention of ‘outer space’ as a ‘historical, geographic, and theatrical
stage for shaping discourse about rights and responsibilities, war and
peace, security and risk’ is profoundly tied to the cold war era (2012:
29). Yet even while the ‘space race’ may be understood as historically
and culturally last century, ‘outer space’ continues to serve as a
sphere of human technological enterprise, a battleground of political
discourse and, a rich source of socio-cultural production.
The critical neglect of ‘outer space’ has been remedied in part by Bell,
Denis Cosgrove, Fraser MacDonald, whose work collectively offers the
beginnings of a ‘critical geography of outer space’ (MacDonald 593).
MacDonald observes that ‘the last fifty years has seen the outer-Earth
become an ordinary and accessible sphere of human endeavour, our
presence in (and reliance on) space making it one of the enabling
conditions for our current mode of everyday life in the west’ (593).
Further interventions, such as Alexander Geppert’s, Imagining Outer
Space: European Astroculture in the Twentieth Century (2012), provide a
historiographical perspective, interrogating the ‘heterogeneous array of
images and artifacts, media and practices that all aim to ascribe
meaning to outer space while stirring both the individual and the
collective imagination’ (8). A cross-disciplinary series of essays
published in Down to Earth: Satellite Technologies, Industries, and
Cultures (2012), edited by Lisa Parks and James Schwoch, along with
Dario Llinares' study, The Astronaut: Cultural Mythology and Idealised
Masculinity(2011) attempt to bring together geographical, historical and
cultural/ media studies approaches to examine astro-culture.
A common aspect of these approaches is an acknowledgement of the need to
encompass cultural, filmic, artistic, and literary engagements with
outer space as objects of enquiry. The influence of spatial thinking on
film and literary scholarship, demonstrated by an increasing concern
with urban space, mobility and the proliferation of terms such as
‘cinematic-’ or ‘literary geographies’, has rarely resulted in a turn
towards ‘outer space’. Indeed, the arrival of ‘cyberspace’ could
arguably be said to have had a profound effect on the cultural
understanding and importance of ‘outer space’ in the collective
imaginary. Visual and textual scholarship has arguably under-engaged
with the fields of cultural geography, cultural history and cultural
studies that are re-imagining ‘astroculture’/‘celestial space’ as part
of what Cosgrove calls a ‘cosmography for the twenty-first century’ (35).
This 2-day conference seeks to explore the significance of ‘outer space’
in textual and visual culture, including literature
(fiction/non-fiction/scientific or legal texts), film
(cinema/documentary/youtube/television/NASA or ISS clips or broadcasts),
digital media (games/twitter/social media), photography, material
culture, ephemera and popular culture.
We especially welcome papers that move beyond the paradigms of
science-fiction studies, and engage with geographical or historical
approaches to visual or textual cultures of ‘outer space’. We invite
papers on the following themes (but not limited to):
* 20th century and post-millennial representations of outer space
* Poetics/poetries of outer space
* Non-fiction and outer space, from film documentary to the
non-fiction novel (for example, Al Reinert’s For All Mankind, Patricio
Guzmán’s Nostalgia for the Light, Oriana Fallaci’s If the Sun Dies,
Norman Mailer’s Of A Fire on the Moon)
* Digital games and outer space
* Visual/textual representations of rockets, satellites,
telescopes, the International Space Station, and other material
technologies of outer space
* Posthumanism – visual/textual representations of
sentient/non-sentient life
* Weird fictions and outer space
* Papers that seek to establish frameworks for a cinematic or
literary geography of outer space
* Papers that examine terms such as ‘cosmography’, ‘celestial
space’, ‘astroculture’, in relation to literature, film, other
visual/textual media
* Visual/textual gendering of ‘outer space’
* Governance, laws, and capital of outer space in visual/textual
culture
* Discourse analysis of space law, treaty, governance in technical
literature
* Non-western/Non-Soviet space programmes and their representation
(for example Cristina De Middel’s Afronauts (2012)
http://www.icp.org/support-icp/infinity-awards/cristina-de-middel)
* Space tourism/personal space flight
* Heritage and outer space (archaeologies of outer space, space
debris, heritage sites, museum orbit)
* Ecology and outer space (space as wilderness or environment,
terraforming, pollution, waste, life, texts such as Charles Cockell’s
Space on Earth (Palgrave 2006), Guy Laliberté
http://www.onedrop.org/en/projects/projects-overview/GAIA.aspx
Abstracts of 250-300 words for final presentations of 15-20 minutes
should be sent to (cosmographies /at/ falmouth.ac.uk) by Friday 25th April
2014. Please include name, affiliation, title of paper, and brief bio.
Participants will be notified by Friday 2nd May.
For further information see: http://www.cosmographies.co.uk
There will be two channels for publication of selected papers from the
conference:
1. An edited journal issue
2. An edited collection of essays. We have had preliminary discussions
with a major commercial academic press and aim to have a proposal based
on selected abstracts with publishers prior to the conference.
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