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[ecrea] Call for Papers: Mapping, Mercator and Modernity: The Impact of the Digital
Tue Feb 07 15:28:38 GMT 2017
Call for Papers: Mapping, Mercator and Modernity: The Impact of the Digital
Workshop 25th-26th April 2017
Venue: Käte Hamburger Kolleg / Centre for Global Cooperation Research,
Universität Duisburg-Essen, Schifferstr. 196, 47059 Duisburg
This funded workshop will explore the relationships between mapping,
linearity, imaginaries of control and global cooperation. What drives
the growing demand for mapping and visualizations of the world? Does
this reflect an increased capacity for contestation or of control and
regulation or perhaps even a retreat from the world? What is at stake in
the fact that maps and visualizations are not the world but leave an
irreducible gap? How does the digital transform the politics of maps and
mapping?
This workshop is part of a two-day event, including a public forum, the
8th Käte Hamburger Dialogue. Participants will include:
Claudia Aradau, Reader in International Politics, King’s College London
David Chandler, Professor of International Relations, University of
Westminster, London
Mark Duffield, Emeritus Professor at the Global Insecurities Centre,
University of Bristol
Anna Feigenbaum, Principal Academic in Digital Storytelling, Faculty of
Media and Communication Bournemouth University
Ute Schneider, Professor of Social and Economic History, Historical
Institute, University Duisburg-Essen (tbc)
The workshop and Dialogue form part of a Mercator project interrogating
the transformation of technologies of global cooperation with the
questioning of the epistemological and ontological assumptions of
modernity. Gerhard Mercator lived in Duisburg for the last 40 years of
his life (1552-1594). As a major founder of both the linear time and
space of modernity, Mercator is most famous for his world map, the
projection of the world in 1569 making straight lines match fixed
courses of sail. Intended for mariners’ use, the map became the accepted
view of the world despite its famous distortions.
?
We would be particularly interested in papers including (but not
necessarily limited to) the following themes:
* The power and importance of mapping as a technology for understanding,
constructing and intervening in the world.
* The impact of the digital on what we understand as mapping in relation
to time and space.
* The political possibilities of thinking and mapping otherwise and the
implications for global cooperation.
Abstracts of 250 words should be sent to Elena Simon,
(simon /at/ gcr21.uni-due.de) by 10 March 2017. Draft papers will be circulated
before the workshop with the possibility that we may produce a
collective publication.
The workshop is funded by Käte Hamburger Kolleg / Centre for Global
Cooperation Research, Universität Duisburg-Essen
https://www.gcr21.org/welcome-to-the-centre-for-global-cooperation-research/cache/no_cache/
so please state if you wish to be considered for funding for
transport/accommodation.
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