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[Commlist] CFP Deadline Reminder: The Senses of Science Fiction: Visions, Sounds, Spaces
Tue Apr 23 21:57:01 GMT 2019
The Senses of Science Fiction: Visions, Sounds, Spaces
An international conference organized by the Speculative Texts and Media
Research Group, American Studies Center, University of Warsaw
December 5-7, 2019
University of Warsaw, Poland
For most of its history, or at least since the late 19th century, the
core conversations of science fiction (SF) have not been kind to the
senses. For different reasons in different decades, the creative
communities and the critical circles have focused on the genre’s status
as the supreme expression of western technomodernity, its imbrications
with the discourses of science and technology, and its subversive
political potential. While always already present in SF’s structural,
material, and creative dimensions, the formal, the aesthetic, and the
sensible have been largely neglected at the expense of the functional,
the political, and the cognitive. The questions of language and literary
style have been discussed only with regard to selected writers, such as
J.G. Ballard or William Gibson, while spectacle in film and television
has been treated with a degree of suspicion and distrust—as something
that dilutes the core values of rigorous speculation. Other less
narrative media—forms in which the aesthetic plays the central role—have
received very little or virtually no critical attention. And yet, for
all its scientific bent and political urgency, science fiction has
always strived to appeal to the senses and to instill in its audiences a
sense of the beautiful, the harmonious, and the sublime.
The notion of aisthesis, that is sense perception, has recently regained
prominence in humanities, playing a significant part in the philosophy
of speculative realism, the turn towards the posthuman, and the shift
away from anthropocentrism brought about by the increasingly widely
embraced paradigm of the Anthropocene. In recognition of this newfound
appreciation of the aesthetic, this conference seeks to recuperate the
invisible and forgotten history of the sensible in the cultures of
science fiction. It also seeks to find new ways of talking about these
dimensions of SF texts across all media that in one way or another
appeal to and engage all things sensible: sight, hearing, touch,
movement, composition, but also smell, taste, auras, and speculative
senses. Such attentiveness to the sensory in science fiction does not
entail abandoning narrative, political, or scientific perspectives.
Indeed, historically, many cultural forms have successfully intertwined
formal elegance with political agency and emotional appeal with
philosophical reflection. We believe science fiction is—and has always
been—among these forms.
While the conference specifically namechecks science fiction, we follow
in the footsteps of Sherryl Vint, Mark Bould, and John Rieder, treating
the genre as a practice and a discourse, rather than an object of finite
parameters. In fact, from a more traditional perspective, many SF texts
that appeal to the senses as much as to the mind have been generically
“impure,” borderline, slipstream, or otherwise hybrid.
Possible topics and areas of inquiry include, but are not limited to,
the following:
* styles and schools in science fiction literature and media
* aesthetics and politics
* aesthetics and fantastic identities (race, gender, sexuality)
* science fiction sublime(s)
* science fiction art, illustration, graphics
* science fiction music, radio, and podcasts
* fantastic architectures: real, visionary, speculative
* design and typography
* science fiction and stage arts: theater, opera, dance
* SF art in/of the Anthropocene
* outsider art
* non-western SF aesthetics
* speculative avant-gardes
* new materialist perspectives on science fiction
* affects, senses, and sensations in science fiction
* hapticity and tactility in science fiction texts
* immersive worlds of science fiction
* the virtual and the actual
* fantastic synaesthesias
* senses and sensations of SF universes and franchises
* SF soundscapes in movies, television, music, and games
* science fiction fashion: upcycling, recycling, DIY, slow fashion,
haute couture
* sounds and spaces of Ethnofuturisms: Afrofuturism, Sinofuturism,
Gulf Futurism, and others
* material-discursive entanglements of science fiction
* spatial dis/orientation
* science fiction aesthetics around the world
* social inequalities and aesthetic differences
For individual papers, please send proposals of up to 300 words. For
multiple participant formats (e.g. discussion panels, roundtables,
etc.), proposals may be up to 500 words long. We also welcome and
encourage non-traditional forms of participation and presentation:
performances, lightning presentations (1 slide & 5 minutes), speed
panels, poster discussions, and others. Pre-formed multiple participant
panels that are all-male will not be considered for inclusion in the
conference. All submissions should be sent to (SFSenses2019 /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(SFSenses2019 /at/ gmail.com)>by May 1, 2019. Applicants will receive a
response by May 15, 2019.
Keynote speakers will be announced in early April 2019, when the
conference website opens.
Any questions and inquiries can be addressed to (SFSenses2019 /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(SFSenses2019 /at/ gmail.com)>.
The Organizing Committee:
Filip Boratyn
Jędrzej Burszta
Paweł Frelik (chair)
Agnieszka Kotwasińska
Stanisław Krawczyk
Anna Kurowicka
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