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[Commlist] CFP: Playfulness - Interdisciplinary Approaches to Cultural Literacy
Fri Nov 06 12:55:00 GMT 2020
*Call for Papers for 5-minute presentations*
PLAYFULNESS Interdisciplinary Approaches to Cultural Literacy
A Virtual Symposium
Thursday 13th – Friday 14th May 2021
Ask busy children what they’re doing and they’ll say ‘I’m playing’. Ask
an adult and they will be playing the piano, the fool, or a video game.
While playfulness forms an integral part of cultural expression and
communication, its interpretation often depends on cultural expectations
and limited interdisciplinary research can be found on the aesthetics of
playfulness, or its role in intercultural communication. For D W
Winnicott, playfulness takes place in the area between inside (self) and
the outside (other/wider cultural experiences) in an intermediate,
transitional area. Melanie Klein and Anna Freud both pioneered their own
ways of utilizing children’s playfulness within the psychotherapeutic
setting as a way of accessing unconscious processes.
Kant’s definition of art as ‘purposeless purposiveness’ sites it at
exactly the point where play & seriousness meet. The reification of play
occurs when ambiguity, humour & laughter, irony or satire, are deployed
in music, literary or visual culture to achieve specific aims (eg. to
critique or lampoon extreme or repressive regimes) - for example
Molière’s play Le bourgeois gentilhomme, or Buñuel’s film Cet obscur
objet du désir), or in postmodern resistance as formulated in Jacques
Derrida’s concept of “play” and Jean Baudrillard’s “simulacra”, or to
counteract the rigidity of institutions and systems —see for example
Pippa Hale’s recent work “Play Rebellion” (2018). The search for meaning
in a chaotic world is eschewed, often playfully, and the postmodern
medium becomes a parody of this quest. ‘Play’ then also becomes a
powerful form of political resistance—of displacing hegemonic narratives
not for the purpose of creating something new, but to destroy and reveal
the constructed nature of what previously existed.
The act of ‘objectless’, or intransitive playfulness, and its
experiential dimension, however, remain largely unexplored. One example
of such ‘play’ can be found in Zen Buddhism, as expressed in the arts of
the Japanese Edo period and in the visual culture of the Japanese Design
Movement of the late 1970s and ‘80s. Another example is the acting
method developed by Oleksandr Tokarchuk at his school of creative acting
in Kyiv, summed up by the phrase “conducting your self” (written as two
separate words). Playfulness, then, becomes part of the artistic
personality, when the real world is understood as a theatre stage and
its decor.
In a world of increasingly transcultural and transmedial forms of
expression, exploring notions of playfulness in their socio-cultural
context offers an approach to cultural literacy which can arguably
foster intercultural understanding in a manner less readily accessible
than through purely experiential means. At the same time, experimenting
with the process and aesthetics of playfulness, facilitated by instant
communication technologies, which cross-fertilise between ages, cultures
and media with remarkable resilience (eg. surrealism), can also offer
valuable insights in fostering intercultural literacy. The aim of this
conference, therefore, is to invite scholars from a wide range of
backgrounds and interests to engage in thoughtful and critical
discussion around the multiple manifestations of playfulness and their
contributions to cultural literacy.
PROPOSALS ON ANY OF THE FOLLOWING – OR ALLIED – TOPICS ARE WELCOME:
* The aesthetics and/or philosophy of playfulness
* Diversity or inclusivity and intersectionality of playfulness
* The role of playfulness in interdisciplinary collaboration or education
* Playfulness and experimental translation
* The role of playfulness in stimulating new ways of thinking in
cultural literacy
* Playfulness in and out of the psychoanalytic consulting room
* Playfulness in media, literature, the visual and performing
artspage2image25036864
This two-day online Symposium is designed to generate active discussion,
focusing on thinking and talking rather than formal presentations, using
simple online platforms and apps to foster a virtual experience. If your
proposal is accepted, it will be included in a digital ‘book of
presentations’ that all participants will be asked to read in advance of
the Symposium. The contributions will be grouped together into parallel
break-out sessions of 90 minutes during which each presenter will
briefly summarise their points in a presentation of max 5 minutes &
three slides, and the subsequent discussion will aim to explore the key
theme of the panel.
You are invited to submit a proposal in English for a 5-minute
presentation. It should consist of your name, affiliation, email
address, title, a 300-word statement on any area of the symposium topic
and a mini-biography (max. 300 words).
Please submit your abstract and bio by filling in the form using the
link provided below by the *deadline of noon GMT on Sunday 6 December
2020*. Proposals that arrive after this date will not be considered.
https://forms.gle/e9Kr6agRiPEUvoFy5Submit your propos
<https://forms.gle/e9Kr6agRiPEUvoFy5>al here
page2image25047424
A number of bursaries will be available to support attendance at the
2021 symposium. The competition for these bursaries will be announced in
mid-December 2020, with a closing-date in early January
2021.page2image25079232
Prior membership of CLE is required; become a
member:https://cleurope.eu/membership/sign-up-for-membership/
<https://cleurope.eu/membership/sign-up-for-membership/>
CONFERENCE FEES
Standard £50 Students (+ ID)/ Unwaged £20
Registration will open on 18 December 2020 & close on 26 March 2021
For more info on CLE see the website: www.cle.world <https://cleurope.eu>
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