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[ecrea] CfP author.net
Wed Nov 29 01:45:25 GMT 2017
*author.net*
/a cross-divisional conference on distributed authorship /
*UCLA, October 5th-6th 2018*
*Organizers:*
*Sean Gurd*, Professor of Classics, University of Missouri
*Francesca Martelli*, Assistant Professor of Classics, UCLA
DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS: January 15, 2018
Distributed authorship is a familiar concept in many fields of cultural
production. Long associated with pre-modern cultures, it still serves as
a mainstay for the study of Classical antiquity, which takes 'Homer' as
its foundational point of orientation, and which, like many other
disciplines in the humanities, has extended its insights into the
open-endedness of oral and performance traditions into its study of
textual dynamics as well. The rise of genetic criticism within textual
studies bears witness to this urge to fray perceptions of the hermetic
closure of the written, and to expose the multiple strands of
collaboration and revision that a text may contain. And the increasingly
widespread use of the multitext in literary editions of authors from
Homer to Joyce offers a material manifestation of this impulse to
display the multiple different levels and modes of distribution at work
in the authorial process.In many areas of the humanities that rely on
traditional textual media, then, the distributed author is alive and
well, and remains a current object of study.
In recent years, however, the dynamic possibilities of distributed
authorship have accelerated most rapidly in media associated with the
digital domain, where modes of communication have rendered artistic
creation increasingly collaborative, multi-local and open-ended. These
developments have prompted important questions on the part of scholars
who study these new media about the ontological status of the artistic,
musical and literary objects that such modes of distribution (re)create.
In musicology, for example, musical modes such as jazz improvisation and
digital experimentation are shown to exploit the complex relay of
creativity within and between the ever-expanding networks of artists and
audiences involved in their production and reception, and construct
themselves in ways that invite others to continue the process of their
ongoing distribution. The impact of such artistic developments on the
identity of 'the author' may be measured by developments in copyright
law, such as the emergence of the Creative Commons, an organization that
enables artists and authors to waive copyright restrictions on
co-creators in order to facilitate their collaborative participation.
And this mode of distribution has in turn prompted important questions
about the orientation of knowledge and power in the collectives and
publics that it creates.
This conference seeks to deepen and expand the theorising of authorial
distribution in the digital domain, and to explore the insights that its
operations in this sphere might lend into the mechanisms of authorial
distribution at work in older (and, indeed, ancient) media. To this end,
it will bring together scholars working in new media with scholars
working across the humanities, in order to explore what kind of dialogue
we might generate on the question of distributed authorship across these
disciplinary (and other) divisions. Ultimately, our aim is to develop
and refine a set of conceptual tools that will bring distributed
authorship into a wider remit of familiarity; and to explore whether
these tools are, in fact, unique to the new media that have inspired
their most recent discursive formulation, or whether they have a range
of application that extends beyond the digital domain.
We invite contributions from those who are engaged directly with the
processes and media that are pushing and complicating ideas of
distributed authorship in the world today, and also from those who are
actively drawing on insights derived from these contemporary
developments in their interpretation of the textual and artistic
processes of the past, on the following topics (among others):
·The distinctive features of the new artistic genres and objects
generated by modes of authorial distribution, from musical mashups to
literary centones.
·The impact that authorial distribution has on the temporality of its
objects, as the multiple agents that form part of the distribution of
those objects spread the processes of their decomposition/re-composition
over time.
·The re-orienting of power relations that arises from the distribution
of authorship among networks of senders and receivers, as also from the
collapsing of 'sender' and 'receiver' functions into one another.
·The modes of 'self'-regulation that authorial collectives develop in
order to sustain their identity.
·Fandom and participatory culture, in both digital and traditional
textual media.
·The operational dynamics of 'multitexts' and 'text networks', and their
influence by and on virtual networks.
Paper proposals will be selected for their potential to open up
questions that transcend the idiom of any single medium and/or
discipline. Please send a proposal of approximately 500 words to
(gurds /at/ missouri.edu) by January 15, 2018.
Confirmed participants include:
*Mario Biagioli*, Distinguished Professor of Law and Science and
Technology Studies, and director of the Centre for Science and
Innovation Studies, UC Davis.
*Georgina Born*, Professor of Music and Anthropology, Oxford University.
*Christopher Kelty*, Professor of Anthropology, Information Studies, and
at the Institute for Society and Genetics, UCLA.
*Scott McGill*, Professor of Classics, Rice University .
*Daniel Selden*, Professor of Literature, UC Santa Cruz.
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