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[Commlist] L'Aquila - First International Conference CLAM - Transcodification: Literatures - Arts - Media
Thu Dec 12 13:44:09 GMT 2019
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University of L'Aquila (Italy)
Department of Humanities – Excellence Program 2018-2022
July 1-3, 2020
First Conference of the ICLA Research Committee on
Literatures/Arts/Media (CLAM)
Transcodification: Literatures - Arts - Media
We invite you to send paper proposals to (clam2020conference /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(clam2020conference /at/ gmail.com)>
Proposals should include an abstract (300 words max), five keywords and
a short biographical note (10 lines max).
The working language of the conference will be English.
The deadline for abstracts submission is February 10, 2020.
Participants will be notified of acceptance by March 15, 2020.
The conference will not have a registration fee.
The conference venue is the Department of Humanities, Viale Nizza, 14,
L’Aquila (Italy).
Further information about accommodation and how to reach the conference
venue will be published at http://www.clam-icla.com (the website is
currently under construction). <http://www.clam-icla.com(the website is
currently under construction).>
Call for Papers:
The transition of narratives, characters, themes and iconic elements
from one code of representation to another represents one of the most
fundamental processes through which the literary and artistic fields
evolve, transform, and expand within a given culture. These same
processes of /transcodification/ also play a vital role in how different
cultures interact across time and space. In the classical world,
mythical narratives were disseminated through the Homeric epic, the
theatrical genre of tragedy and the visual arts. From the onset of
Christianity to the late modern age, the history of European art has
been driven by the adaptation of episodes from the Bible and other
religious texts across a number of media, from painting to sculpture,
from medieval plays to /sacre rappresentazioni/, from musical texts to
folkloric practices. Fables have moved from orality to the written form;
at the same time, written narratives have been circulating through oral
transmission. Medieval and early modern manuscripts were illuminated;
modern and contemporary texts are illustrated. From antiquity to the
contemporary media franchise, transcodification is ubiquitous.
Today, mass media and the digital revolution have changed—and are still
changing—the notions of author, text, public, intellectual property and
medium that were inherited from the 20^th century’s critical traditions.
Literature, cinema, theatre and television are now facing the
multisensory logic of the contemporary mediascape, a logic based on
inclusion, acceleration, simultaneity and hyper-mediation. The idea of
text has expanded into that of hypertext, while narration is becoming
more and more pluralistic, polycentric and antihierarchical: as proposed
by Lev Manovich (2010), narratives are becoming more and more like
/softwares/ that can be endlessly rewritten and reused. Cinema is being
re-articulated in the forms of the so-called postcinema, in which films
become part of a larger system of converging media and cinema can be
relocated outside its traditional and institutional spaces. This
medium’s formal structures are being disseminated in urban spaces, thus
giving birth to new forms of visuality like videomapping and media
façade installations. Media may quote and thematize other media,
according to the well-known concept of re-mediation coined by Bolter and
Grusin (1999), thus generating what Irina Rajewsky (2002) defined as
“intermedia references”. The interactivity and immersivity of
videogames, augmented reality and virtual reality, as well as the
transmedia and crossmedia organization of storytelling (especially in
the case of TV series), also suggest a deep sense of engagement towards
media hybridization and the exploration of innovative forms of
textuality. Finally, the question has arisen, and is still being
debated, whether it is appropriate to consider the theatre as part of
the cluster of forms which, since the middle of the 20th century, have
been subsumed under the general label "media".
Given these premises, the first CLAM conference /Transcodification:
Literatures – Arts - Media/ represents an invitation to investigate the
principles and practices of transcodification across time and space, as
well as to discuss re-mediation as an aesthetic category which implies
fluidity, fragmentation and pluralization. The conference’s main purpose
is to offer an intermedial perspective on fiction and the arts taking as
a starting point the insights provided by the most recent developments
in comparative literature. More specifically, such an inquiry’s aim is
twofold:
-historicizing transcodification, re-mediation and intermediality as
both a set of practices and a set of philosophical notions;
-exploring transcodification in the contemporary (post-WWII) age and
examining the new roles and configurations of literature in the global
polymorphic imagination.
We encourage contributions addressing any of the following areas or any
interrelation between them:
-Transcodification, adaptation and intermediality, from antiquity to today;
-Literatures and the arts;
-Transmedia narratology;
-Philosophies of transcodification;
-Literary transcodifications: new perspectives in comparative literature;
-The dissemination of literary techniques (narration, empathy, point of
view and other rhetoric strategies) in every aspect of contemporary culture;
-Cinema/TV series and intermediality: theoretical frameworks;
-Postcinema and new digital technologies;
-TV series and transmedia television
-Baroque/Neo-Baroque: theories, aesthetics and technologies;
-Performance, performativity and theatricality;
-Digital Art: aesthetics, environments and historical perspectives;
-Inter-art studies;
-Hybrid forms of mediality: musical theatre, theatrical performance,
graphic novels, transmedia storytelling, computer games, video art,
video clips, advertising, webseries, videomapping, media façade, etc.
Confirmed Keynotes:
Sean Cubitt(University of Melbourne) / Marina Grishakova (University of
Tartu) / Christopher Johnson (Arizona State University) / Ágnes Pethő
(Sapientia University of Cluj-Napoca) / Marie-Laure Ryan (University of
Colorado) / Rebecca Schneider (Brown University) /
Scientific Committee:
Massimo Fusillo, University of L’Aquila, Italy / Marina Grishakova,
University of Tartu, Estonia / Hans-Joachim Backe, IT University of
Copenhagen, Denmark / Jan Baetens, KU Leuven, Belgium / Bart Van Den
Bossche, KU Leuven, Belgium / Kiene Brillenburg Wurth, University of
Utrecht, Netherlands / Jørgen Bruhn, Linnaeus University, Sweden /
Philippe Despoix, University of Montréal, Canada / Caroline Fischer,
Université de Pau, France / Yorimitsu Hashimoto, University of Osaka,
Japan / Karin Kukkonen, University of Oslo, Norway / Christina
Ljungberg, University of Zurich, Switzerland / Kai Mikkonen, University
of Helsinki, Finland / Nam Soo-Young, Korea National Univerity of Arts,
Korea / Haun Saussy, University of Chicago, USA / Márcio
Seligmann-Silva, State University of Campinas, UNICAMP, Brazil
Organizing Committee:
Massimo Fusillo / Doriana Legge / Mirko Lino / Mattia Petricola /
Gianluigi Rossini
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