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[Commlist] Keep It Simple! Make It Fast (KISMIF) International Conference 2022 CFP
Tue Mar 22 21:50:05 GMT 2022
*Keep It Simple! Make It Fast (KISMIF) International Conference 2022*
Conference Theme: DIY Cultures, Sustainability and Artistic Ecosystems
July 13th-July 16th, 2022
University of Porto, Portugal
We are pleased to announce the sixth edition KISMIF International
Conference ‘DIY Cultures, Sustainability and Artistic Ecosystems’
(KISMIF 2022) which will take place in Porto, Portugal, between July 13
and 16 2022.
The KISMIF Conference provides a unique /forum /in which participants
can discuss and share information about alternative cultures and DIY
practices from around the world. KISMIF focuses on cultural practices
often opposed to more conventional, mass-produced and commodified forms
of cultural production and mediation and the anti-hegemonic ideologies
around aesthetic and lifestyle politics that are typically embedded in
DIY culture. KISMIF is the first, and to date only Conference in the
world that examines DIY culture theory and practice as an increasingly
significant form of cultural practice in a global context. The
conference has a multi-/transdisciplinary approach, accepting
contributions from academics, artists and activists involved in all
aspects of alternative scenes and DIY cultures, and based on various
methodologies – quantitative, qualitative and multi-methodological
analyses. The aim is to discuss not only music, but also other artistic
fields such as cinema and video, graffiti and street art, theatre and
performing arts, literature and poetry, radio, programming and editing,
graphic design, illustration, cartoons and comics.
Seeking to respond to the wish reiterated by researchers, artists and
activists present at previous editions of the KISMIF conference, the
sixth KISMIF will focus on ‘DIY Cultures, Sustainability and Artistic
Ecosystems’. The world is currently experiencing a whirlwind of social
change. Alongside issues of migration, populism, and a resurgence of
nationalism; we are faced with growing antagonisms facilitated by
austerity, displacement, racism, class tensions, economic crises and
climate change. The world is becoming an increasingly precarious place –
which has been made visible and amplified with COVID-19. In this
context, we believe that DIY cultures-and the diverse processes and
forms through which they function-offer real resources and forces of
hope and change for artistic-musical ecosystems and their corresponding
sustainability. As a cultural form and practice, DIY has evolved from
its beginnings during the punk era of the 1970s to become an innovative
matrix of trans-local culture. At its core is a willingness to blur
disciplinary and thematic boundaries, demystify processes and provide
spaces for marginalised, subaltern, and diverse voices and communities
from the Global North to the Global South. For all its thorny
confrontations, punk’s cultural practices-its DIY ethos, networks,
spaces, and media (albums, styles, fanzines, film, performances, video
art, design and other diverse creativities) – facilitated and enabled
inclusivity and agency. While not neglecting or forgetting its origins,
such an ethos can be evidenced when we talk about issues of ongoing
social change. Within DIY practice, there is the potential to break down
existing hierarchies, to respond to many challenges and to relate
constructively to social, territorial, racial, sexual, gender and health
differences, among others.
The fact that DIY is a vital component of the artistic process is
extremely relevant. In fact, there are many collaborative and
community-oriented art practices originating in DIY cultures, such as
socio-cultural centres, urban scenes/atmospheres and art projects deeply
embedded in local communities. The arts have never been a mere
commercial product of hegemonic powers; on the contrary, they are
expressions, reflections and interpretations that encompass a wide range
of meanings. They have always been a means of semiotic protest and
exploration; they have constantly seen things differently and served as
a resource for creative action. They can be discreetly or openly
disruptive; they can be pacifying as a distraction or function as a
means of relation. However, through creativity, people acquire
knowledge-find and express emotions and take control of their
surroundings. We intend to explore DIY cultures and other related
alternative cultures building a matrix to convert art into action as a
determinant for the sustainability of contemporary
artistic-musical-cultural ecosystems. DIY cultures are important for
finding strategies for action, for connecting and uniting communities
and for strengthening resilience in the face of future social change.
Through research and collaborative practices, we seek to demonstrate
innovative ways of making and co-creation, but also to resist and make
contexts more resilient and sustainable. Using examples of empirical and
artistic relationships with multi-generational DIY scenes around the
world, we will reveal how, over the past 50 years, these seemingly
‘peripheral’ arts have accumulated a variety of practices to
simultaneously highlight and promote themes of democracy and social and
spatial justice; of upholding human rights; of promoting decolonial
content. Indeed, they provide multifaceted responses to the challenges
of our world, promoting seminal ideas for a better future especially in
this (still) pandemic context.
In 2022, KISMIF’s scientific programme will again be accompanied by a
diverse offering of social and cultural contents, characterised by a
series of artistic events with a special focus on the sustainability of
musical-artistic-cultural ecosystems. The aim is to provide a unique
experience in terms of transglobal and inclusive DIY cultures.
Symbolically, the first day of the conference takes place 37 years after
Live Aid, a music event that aimed to draw attention to and raise funds
to address a pressing global challenge of its time. The KISMIF 2022
Conference will be preceded by a Summer School entitled ‘Rebels with a
Cause’ that will take place 12 July 2022 at the Teatro Municipal do
Porto- Rivoli [Porto- Rivoli Municipal Theatre]. This Summer School will
offer the opportunity to all interested parties, including Conference
participants, to attend workshops given by experts in these fields,
namely within the arts-based-research approach. Informations about the
Summer School will be progressively disseminated on the KISMIF
Conference website: www.kismifconference.com
<http://www.kismifconference.com>.
The submission of abstracts for this Conference is open to researchers,
academics, activists and artists working in all areas of sociology,
anthropology, history, cultural economics, cultural studies, geography,
philosophy, urban planning, media and cognate disciplines such as
design, illustration, popular music, film, visual and performing arts.
This initiative follows the great success of the past four KISMIF
Conferences (held in 2014, 2015, 2016, 2018 and 2021) and brings
together an international community of researchers, artists and
activists focusing on alternative music-art scenes and do-it-yourself
cultures.
** Themes**
The KISMIF Convenors welcome abstracts pertaining to the following
topics, taking into account the KISMIF 2022 theme – DIY Cultures,
Sustainability and Artistic Ecosystems:
*
o New spheres/platforms/processes/locations of cultural, artistic
and musical production through the use of cutting-edge digital
technologies
o Developments in social theory around artistic ecosystems, art
worlds, music fields, artistic fields and
local/trans-local/virtual music scenes
o Interdisciplinary environments, atmospheres, sounds and
perceptions around music and DIY cultures: music in cities,
musical cities, and post-musical cities
o Musical-artistic-cultural ecosystems and ecologies from the
North to the Global South
o Theoretical and methodological challenges/dilemmas in
investigating artistic and cultural differences in different
ecosystems around the world
o Sustainable spaces/venues and music-artistic consumption in a
time of climate challenges
o Subcultures, post-subcultures, scenes, post-scenes,
musical-artistic-cultural ecosystems and ecologies from North to
Global South
o The role/importance of social spaces/locations/territories in
alternative music scenes and DIY cultures at local, trans-local
and virtual levels
o Peripheral and/or rural music-artistic-cultural scenes, economic
development, social value, empowerment and social justice
o Post colonialism, decolonisation, transglobal art and music
scenes and citizenship
o New artistic and musical productions and intermediations that
support social/spatial justice and environmental sustainability
o Re-evaluation of the social, cultural and economic values of
music, arts and culture
o Cities, ecosystems and contemporary countercultural
resistance/resilience in social, musical and artistic practices
o City, aesthetics and gentrification: resistance to
gentrification and the role of music-art scenes
o Transitions towards sustainability in DIY youth scenes and new
sustainable DIY (sub)cultures
o ‘Green’ art-cultural movements that seek to improve the lives of
local communities, combat environmental challenges, and promote
sustainable development
o Music, arts, green movements, green concerns and environmental
activism
o Urban micro-economies, DIY careers and the evolution of music
mediation processes
o Digital markets and /non-fungible token/ (NTF) trading:
overviews and challenges for a sustainable economy based on
creative contents
o Cultures and arts of sustainability and their relationship with
resilience processes aimed at preserving diversity (social
systems, ecosystems, and digital technologies, among others)
o Gender, migration, diasporas, refugees, artistic/musical
movements and cultural dimensions of inclusion and sustainability
o The sociological forms of contemporary migrations and their
relationship with artistic spaces and cultures of resistance
o Undoing the gender(s): subjectivities, (cis)temic rupture and
contemporary artistic-musical manifestations
o Pedagogies and interventions based on artistic/musical DIY and
socio-ethnic justice
o ‘The old world agonises, a new world is slow to be born, and in
this light-dark monsters appear’: totalitarianisms and the role
of youth cultures and the arts in the constitution of (r)existences
o Artivisms, DIY, post-contemporary art, and alternative systems
of decolonial artistic-musical-cultural production: rethinking
culture in the Anthropocene
o Music, fashion, art, film, and literature as resilient symbolic
fields: imagining possible futures
o New local, regional and virtual social movements and emerging
artivists processes
o Cultural heritage, (post-)cultural and creative industries,
memories, and archives and decolonial vision: strategies for
artistic, musical and cultural development, historical
reparation and community sustainability
o Protection of cultural, artistic, and musical artefacts and
assets from anthropogenic threats
o Digital arts, artistic co-creation and extended dynamics of
musical-artistic and cultural participation involving
stakeholders, social innovators and citizens
o Arts, inclusion, music, wellbeing, mental health, and quality of
life
o Ecological, political, socio-political, collective and
individual climates and their respective impacts on
artistic-musical creation
o Impacts of the pandemic on musical and artistic ecosystems in
the Global North and South.
o DIY cultures in times of global climate crisis
o Lessons learned from the COVID-19 crisis for sustainable
post-crisis management of society
o Festivals, events and the festivalisation of culture in a
post-pandemic context
o Utopias, post-utopias, dystopias and public policies for
creativity, arts, culture and music
o Challenges and imagined futures in the design of policies for
arts, culture and music in the post-pandemic
o Arts-based-research and cultural policies in the Global North
and South actively interfacing with communities, local,
regional, or national authorities and sectoral social partners
The language of the conference is English. All proposals must be written
in English and submitted no later than 31 March 2022, to the KISMIF
Conference website:
https://www.kismifconference.com/call-conference/abstract-submision/
<https://www.kismifconference.com/call-conference/abstract-submision/>
The call can also be viewed here;
https://www.kismifconference.com/call-conference/
<https://www.kismifconference.com/call-conference/>
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