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[Commlist] cfp: (Im)Possibility
Mon Oct 28 18:14:45 GMT 2019
CALL FOR PAPERS: (IM)POSSIBILITY
Graduate Student Conference
Department of Art, Film and Visual Studies
Harvard University
April 9–10, 2020
(Im)possibility marks a limit of available information, a threshold of
representation, a cessation of action. Thinking at the limits of the
possible gives rise to a specific set of issues: how might we articulate
that which cannot be said? How might we orient ourselves toward that for
which no available theory or representation is adequate?
While it is primarily thought of as an exception, impossibility is in
fact ubiquitous and our relationship to it intimate. To demonstrate the
omnipresence of the impossible, some might look toward contemporary
political crises, saying that current conditions are untenable. Others
might point to ecological destruction, noting that human life itself may
soon become an impossibility. So integrated is this limit into the
fabric of daily life that it has become commonplace in contemporary
discourse to claim that the impossible can no longer be called—at least
in any straightforward sense—unlivable.
Indeed, Black studies theorist Frank B. Wilderson III would respond that
the category of “humanity” has always rendered some lives
impossible—that the very concept of the human constructs Blackness as a
site of nonbeing subject to, and of, perpetual extraction, gratuitous
violence, and social death.
Alexander Kluge writes that cinema is the single medium capable of
capturing “the impossible moment”—a moment that couldn’t be imagined
beforehand, and which can never be repeated again. Cinema and digital
media enable us to glimpse other realms of (im)possibility—realms in
which the impossible can manifest as fiction, simulation, speculation,
or absurdity. Outside the bounds of continuous space and time, the
(im)possible might circulate here: not the world as it is, but the world
as we might make it.
Or, perhaps cinema and digital media—despite all their promises to
collapse traditional hierarchies and think otherwise—give rise to new
structural, technological, and epistemological impossibilities. Digital
media rely on that which is impossible to comprehend: data made
illegible in code, information flows too large or too fast to grasp. No
single spectator can configure themselves as the subject of such
information.
We don’t have to choose: (im)possibility is given in the shared
periphery of a futural, idealized dimension and a present, negative
dimension. It lays waste to current frameworks, concepts, and worlds
while offering insight from beyond the break. (Im)possibility beckons as
a radical promise because it endures as an impassive present, and one of
the challenges of the contemporary moment might be to hold those two
modalities together. How might we consider the impossible itself as
anything other than a negative concept—an index of failure? What might
we articulate about (im)possibility without, for all that, rendering it
(as another) possible?
This conference aims to foster an environment of exchange and discussion
amongst a diverse set of participants across fields that include, but
are not limited to, film and media studies; the histories of science,
technology, and computing; the history of art and architecture; and
visual culture. We invite proposals for scholarly papers, audio-visual
presentations, aural installations, exploratory writing, and
performances that engage with, as well as extend beyond, the areas
listed below. Please submit abstracts (no longer than 300 words),
together with a short biographical note, to (fvsconference /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(fvsconference /at/ gmail.com)> by January 15, 2020. Presenters will be
notified in late February 2020.
Afro-pessimism
Anthropocene
Anaxagora
Apocalypse
Apophatic theology
Atmosphere
Being (of Nothingness)
Black cinema
Blackness
Borders
Climate change
Colonialism
Conspiracy
Crisis
Deep time
Ecology
Epistemological limits
Fiction
Fugitivity
Gnosis
Hidden infrastructures
(Im)possibility
(In)visibility
Migration
Negation
Negativity
Non-anthropocentric intensities
Non-philosophy
(Non)sensuousness
Opacity
Pessimism
Queer (non)sociality
Representation and its limits
Sabotage
States of exception
Surveillance
Terra Nullius
The end of Galileo’s visibility postulate
Thirdness/the neutral
Unintelligibility
Utopia
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