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[ecrea] CFP im@go n. 13 > The matter of the imaginary. Objects as symbols of daily life
Mon Oct 29 14:34:23 GMT 2018
im@go. A Journal of the Social Imaginary (www.imagojournal.it
<http://www.imagojournal.it>)
Call for Papers (n. 13): The matter of the imaginary. Objects as symbols
of daily life
Editors: Fabio La Rocca & Antonio Tramontana
Objects define the boundaries of our daily life. They reveal a constant
in our anthropological root while building up the fenced area of our
life. In their being technologically advanced and witnesses of the age
of globalization, objects seem to play always the same script: they go
with the gesture, they lead it and they give a preestablished direction
to the richness of expressions of our body substance (Leroi-Gourhan).
This is an anthropological issue that is, however, interwoven with the
generation of social forms if we take into account that objects are as a
knot of an endless network of exchanges and relations among different
personalities that meet around the object itself (Simmel). /Sub specie
aeternitatis/, but also historical matter. Technical and cognitive
competences find their expressivity in the reign of the objects: a kind
of general intellect gathering around its substance and that finds also
ways of opposing the will of its producer and/or user (Marx). Objects
are not only the crystallization of a gesture, or of a social knowledge.
Into an object are concentrated desires and hopes, memories and
feelings, dreams and utopias (Benjamin). Last but not least, objects are
signs that, in their referring to one another, create a single global
system that surrounds us daily.
However, objects seem to be more than the mere sum of the parts through
which they are built. Notwithstanding the multifarious ways of studying
them, they always keep a certain degree of excess that escapes the world
of knowledge. It seems that there is an obscure matter next to the
touched object, to the object that resists, next to the object that
drives and wraps us, next to the numinous components of the objects and
next to the existential richness of the object. This obscure matter is
not possible to get and, still, it does not die. But there is even more
than this. By rephrasing Durand, it seems that there is a symbolic
component ontologically and chronologically preceding the materiality of
the object itself.
In containing substance and symbols, in gathering together convenience
and dream, in composing the rationality of function and the
irrationality of desire, objects do stand as melting points of the
complexity of human beings and they find in daily life the scenario for
the emergence of those things. When applied to objects, the lens of the
imaginary may represent the gateway to access the untameable excess of
substance, a viaticum to access the dark side. When looking at an
armchair or a car, a gadget or a body prosthesis, a book or a piece of
cutlery, a glass or a smartphone, in considering each of these objects a
symbolic image having a materiality, it is possible to get in touch with
that “universal symbolic language through which we give a shape to
feeling, images, ideas and actions” (Wunenburger). Objects thus become
the “matter of the imaginary” and it is with them that we are lead into
the generative process of social meaning that is determined in daily
life. In this perspective, objects are energetic entities that push the
collective behaviour to take on unprecedented shapes: we are gathered
together or separated on the base of the deep emotive dimension rooted
in the symbolic component contained in objects. On the other hand, the
investigation of the ‘removed’ gets harder and harder when it becomes
less accessible, that is the bigger our exposure to that materiality is,
the smaller our ability to investigate the invisible qualities of
objects. The more objects crowd our life, the less we manage to get in
touch with their imaginary component.
This is our proposal for /im@go /next issue: a journey in the
exploration of daily daydreams via the study of the invisible order of
today’s time. A journey into enter the viscerality of things and to
rediscover the symbolic dimension contained in objects used in our daily
life.
Proposals may be submitted in Italian, English, and French, and sent
simultaneously to: (rivistaimago /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(rivistaimago /at/ gmail.com)>; (tramontanaantonio /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(tramontanaantonio /at/ gmail.com)>; (fabio.la-rocca /at/ univ-montp3.fr)
<mailto:(fabio.la-rocca /at/ univ-montp3.fr)>.
Deadline for the submission of abstracts: *February 10th, 2019*
Notification of abstract acceptance: *February 27th, 2019*
Preliminary papers to the editors: *April 14th, 2019*
Revised peer-reviewed papers to the editors: *June 10th, 2019*
Publication: *June 2019*
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