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[Commlist] CFP: "Semiotics of Dissimulation". Concealment and strategies of deceit. Versus, journal of Semiotics and Philosophy of Language
Tue Mar 26 07:14:28 GMT 2019
CFP: "Semiotics of Dissimulation". Concealment and strategies of deceit. 
Versus, journal of Semiotics and Philosophy of Language.
The international journal Versus (or VS, as is often known) is preparing 
a thematic issue about "Semiotics of Dissimulation". Versus is a 
Semiotic journal, dealing also with Theory and Philosophy of language, 
and it was founded in 1971 by Umberto Eco, who has been its director 
until February 2016. Versus is currently directed by Patrizia Violi. 
Further information about the journal at 
http://versus.dfc.unibo.it/riv1_en.php 
<http://versus.dfc.unibo.it/riv1_en.php>
THIS CALL FOR PAPERS IS PUBLISHED ONLINE AT 
http://versus.dfc.unibo.it/news.php?indice=39 
<http://versus.dfc.unibo.it/news.php?indice=39>
CFP ALSO AVAILABLE IN ITALIAN 
(http://versus.dfc.unibo.it/call_vs_130_IT.pdf 
<http://versus.dfc.unibo.it/call_vs_130_IT.pdf>) AND FRENCH 
(http://versus.dfc.unibo.it/call_vs_130_FR.pdf 
<http://versus.dfc.unibo.it/call_vs_130_FR.pdf>)
ISSUE EDITOR: Alessandra Pozzo
CALL FOR PAPERS
Versus – Quaderni di studi semiotici is soliciting original articles for 
a special issue dedicated to semiotics of concealment and strategies of 
deceit.
The aim of the publication is to pinpoint contemporary practices of 
cryptic communication, in different cultural and cognitive contexts, 
adopting both a diachronic and a comparative perspective addressed to a 
better understanding of their meaning processes. The age of 
globalisation has brought an undeniable inclination towards secret 
expressions and deception in various socio-cultural levels and cultures. 
The special issue shall bring together researches on secret 
communication and deceit techniques (both practices of concealment) 
coming from different theoretical fields that have rarely interacted 
since now, with the aim of drawing a picture of common features and 
peculiarities of different circumstances of dissimulation. The issue 
intends to provide scientific methods capable of identifying the 
presence of ciphered or concealed messages, recognizing 
pseudo-encryptions (that is, the projection of a coding procedure on a 
text which is not actually ciphered) and false decryptions descending 
from them. In this perspective, cryptography – which is a ciphered 
communication made to send messages directed exclusively to a single 
interlocutor – is similar to a sort of “voluntary” dissimulation 
intended to a single solver, which is also the most common kind of 
dissimulation. Moving from this practice, and from its identification, 
other contrasting and complementary practices shall be recognised, such 
as puzzles, meant as voluntary dissimulation addressed to multiple solvers.
In the period between the two World Wars, some of the devices 
traditionally employed in diplomatic and military cryptography have 
changed their function, and eventually provided the basis for the 
foundation of computer science. In that period, a renewed interest for 
the field of secret communication arises: the means usually employed to 
codify the messages are deemed too insecure, and then artisanal 
cryptography is considered unavoidably untrustworthy. Some histories of 
cryptography – meant as the more urgent and necessary practice of 
dissimulation – are being published; they do not aim exclusively at 
cataloguing cryptography techniques but deal also with topics falling 
outside military tactics. For instance, they analyse methodologies 
conceived to decipher texts in ancient languages whose code has been 
lost – one of the scopes of archaeology, that consider such acts of 
decoding an involuntary dissimulation, which has become not accessible 
for a historic inconvenient.
These works have pointed out some features of the inner logic of 
decrypting that opened the way to a new deepening of the related issue: 
semiotics – and especially interpretative semiotics – can claim a 
crucial role in this process of theoretical re-thinking. For this 
reason, one of the aims of this special issue is to find a new 
definition of the thin border between interpretation and decryption.
Moving from a perspective that looks especially at interpretative 
dynamics and sign dimension, the expected contributions will focus on 
all the topics discussed in the call, and particularly on:
- Cryptography and secret communication
- Military codes and espionage
- Professional secret codes in finance and business
- Gangs and mobs codes
- Abduction and deciphering
- Private slangs in situations of danger
- Cryptography as voluntary dissimulation, addressed to a single solver
- Puzzles and riddles as voluntary dissimulation addressed to multiple 
solvers
- Ancient languages practices of deciphering as involuntary dissimulation
- Pseudo-encryptions and false decryptions
- Dissimulation as moral practice
- Religious dissimulation
- Concealment and oblivion techniques
- Dissimulated authors in literary and narrative texts
- The false in scientific discourse
- Allusions, mentions and citations
- Magic and mystic false decryptions
- Dissimulation and religious sects
- Religious mimicry
- Dissimulation in political language and communication
Deadlines
- 30/03/2019: deadline for abstract-proposals (500 words max), 
accompanied by references and short biographic note
- 30/04/2019: notification of acceptation/refusal of the proposal
- 15/10/2019: deadline for completed articles, formatted according to 
Versus style guidelines
- 15/12/2019: notification of referees’ reviews
- 30/01/2020: deadline for final versions of the articles
Abstracts and papers have to be sent to the following email addresses: 
(redazione.vs /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(redazione.vs /at/ gmail.com)>, 
(alessandrapozzo /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(alessandrapozzo /at/ gmail.com)>
Accepted languages: English, French, Italian
Publishing style guide at: 
http://versus.dfc.unibo.it/VS_guidelines_ENG.pdf 
<http://versus.dfc.unibo.it/VS_guidelines_ENG.pdf>
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