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[ecrea] CFP: InVisible Culture, Issue 28 CFP "Contending with Crisis"
Fri Jun 02 14:39:14 GMT 2017
/InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture (IVC)/is
circulating the CFP for its 28th
Issue<http://ivc.lib.rochester.edu/call-for-papers-issue-28-contending-with-crisis/>“Contending
with Crisis.”
<http://ivc.lib.rochester.edu/call-for-papers-issue-28-contending-with-crisis/>
Thedeadline for submissions is June 30th, 2017. Please share widely with
any potentially interested scholars, artists, and relevant listservs,
anddon’t hesitate to reach out with any questions.
We are also pleased to announce that IVC 26: Border Crossings
<http://ivc.lib.rochester.edu>, the second installment of our Special
Double Issue 25 & 26 is now live. In addition to our regular featured
content, the special issue includes contributions from University of
Rochesterfaculty and an interview with renowned art historian Douglas
Crimp about his memoir///Before Pictures/.
—
Hend Alawadhi
هند العوضي
Managing Editor
/InVisible Culture/
503A Morey Hall
University of Rochester
Rochester, NY 14627
http://ivc.lib.rochester.edu
(halawadh /at/ ur.rochester.edu)
*Issue 28: “Contending with Crisis” *
For its twenty-eighth issue,///InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal
for Visual Culture/ invites scholarly articles and creative works that
address the complex and multiple meanings of contending with crisis.
Defined by the global uncertainty of a world afflicted by varied and
ambiguously interrelated states of emergency, the present can be seen as
a critical historical conjuncture characterized by crisis. In the
context of its worldwide occurrence, crisis refers irreducibly to a
multitude of circumstances, events, and thematizations: military
conflict, debt crises, issues of political representation, the mass
migration and displacement of refugees, increasing ecological
disruptions. Such ruptures in the social demand constant attention from
individuals and communities, constituting a need for committed
artististic and scholarly engagements with questions of what it means to
be in crisis and how to deal with it.
Following Lauren Berlant’s understanding of crisis as “an emergency in
the reproduction of life, a transition that has not found its genres for
moving on,” we encourage authors to contemplate the fluidity/liminality
of crisis, exploring both its emancipatory and repressive potentials. As
an ongoing situation, a conceptual and rhetorical figure, an ideological
representation and for many an urgent fact of life, the contemporary
condition of crisis evokes a range of responses from those forced to
contend with it.
For IVC 28, we invite contributors to explore visual representations and
contestations of various states of crisis. How do crises emerge and
perform in the visual field? How does the global situation of crisis
reconfigure the possibilities of political representation? How do the
material conditions of crisis constrain and transform everyday life and
social organization? What kind of aesthetic responses and modes of
cultural production proliferate in response? What forms of domination
surface in times of crisis and how do they become realized in ensuing
reorganizations of social orders? What productive potentials emerge or
re-emerge in the face of specific and far-reaching crisis conditions?
Possible topics of exploration include, but are not limited to:
• Visualizing/representing crisis, the visual politics of crisis
• Political representation and subjectivity in/of crisis
• Uneven distribution of vulnerabilities along lines of race,
gender, and sexuality
• Precarity, biopolitics and affective regimes of crisis and austerity
• Activism, social movements, visual and performative protest
repertoires
• Creative responses to states of crisis, new modes of artistic
production, aesthetics of resistance
• Collaborative aesthetics and the commons
• Material landscapes of crisis, crisis and urban space, austerity
urbanism
• Aesthetics of rupture, ruin, abandonment
• Historiographies, afterlives of crises
• Crisis genres: crises of dispossession (debt crisis, moral
discourse of indebtedness), crises of political
representation (Arab Spring, global rise of neo-populist
nationalisms, Brexit, 2016 US election), postcolonial crises,
military crises (Syria, Ukraine), refugee and humanitarian crisis,
ecological crises (climate change, Fukushima, DAPL)
*Please send completed papers (with references following the guidelines
from the Chicago Manual of Style) of between 4,000 and 10,000 words to
(invisible.culture /at/ ur.rochester.edu)** by June 30th, 2017. Inquiries
should be sent to the same address.*
*Creative/Artistic Works*
In addition to written materials, InVisible Culture is accepting works
in other media (video, photography, drawing, code) that reflect upon the
theme as it is outlined above. Please submit creative or artistic works
along with an artist statement of no more than two pages to
(invisible.culture /at/ ur.rochester.edu). For questions or more details
concerning acceptable formats, go to
http://ivc.lib.rochester.edu/contribute or contact the same address.
*Reviews*
/InVisible Culture///is also currently seeking submissions for book,
exhibition, and film reviews (600-1,000 words). To submit a review
proposal, go to http://ivc.lib.rochester.edu/contribute or contact
(invisible.culture /at/ ur.rochester.edu).
*Dialogues *
The journal also invites submissions to its Dialogues page, which will
accommodate more immediate responses to the topic of the current issue.
For further details, please contact us at
(invisible.culture /at/ ur.rochester.edu) with the subject heading “Dialogues
submission.”
* /InVisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture (IVC)/ is
a student-run interdisciplinary journal published online twice a year in
an open access format. Through peer reviewed articles, creative works,
and reviews of books, films, and exhibitions, our issues explore
changing themes in visual culture. Fostering a global and current dialog
across fields, IVC investigates the power and limits of vision.
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