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[Commlist] Call for Papers: Constructing Fantastical Worlds from Antiquity to the Present
Fri Jan 21 12:35:53 GMT 2022
*/Constructing Fantastical Worlds: from Antiquity to the Present/*
**
University of Amsterdam, Thursday 30^th June– Friday 1^st July 2022
Keynote Speakers:**DrBenjamin Stevens (Trinity University) and Dr Rutger
Allan (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam)
**
This interdisciplinary two-day workshop is devoted to the construction
of fantastical worlds across various narrative media from antiquity to
the present.
In recent years, media and literary studies have drawn attention to the
process of constructing ‘imaginary’ or ‘secondary’ worlds. We define
these fantastical universes as fictional worlds that involve creatures
and/or events whose existence and/or occurrence is impossible in our
actual world. Being often heterotopic and heterochronic and endowed with
their own geographies, populations, histories, governments, etc.,
fantastical worlds may in complex ways reflect, contrast, and/or
transcend ordinary reality.
Yet while this phenomenon is generally considered to originate in
Tolkien, fantastical worldbuilding can be recognised in antiquity as
well. Recent studies in classical literature and receptions have
emphasised the fantasy-like quality of classics like Homer’s/Odyssey/,
Ovid’s/Metamorphoses/, and Plato’s eschatological myths, while linguists
and narratologists have brought to light literary devices that might be
used by ancient authors to construct fantastical worlds and mediate the
audience’s experience of them. Rarely, however, has the connection been
made between the classical and contemporary construction of fantastical
worlds, let alone between classics and modern media studies. The
overarching aim of the workshop is to launch such an interdisciplinary
discussion in search of a comparative, diachronic perspective on
fantastical worldbuilding.
Principally, the workshop will focus on the*how*of fantastical
worldbuilding, i.e.,//on the devices and techniques used in different
times and media to create a fantastical world, as well as the ways in
which this world is presented as different from yet somehow anchored in
reality.
We invite papers that address one (or more) of the following research
questions:
1. What devices do authors or artists use to construct fantastical
worlds? (E.g., common ground management, deixis, the general
rendering of time and space)
2. How are these fantastical worlds anchored to the audience’s actual
world, and what devices are used to express this relationship?
(E.g., metalepsis, immersive/enactive devices, shifts in the deictic
centre)
3. How do fantastical worlds encourage the audience to reflect on the
actual world? (E.g., metaphor, metonymy, contrast)
4. What differences and similarities exist between the construction of
fantastical worlds in different periods and different media?
5. How are the devices used by ancient authors to construct fantastical
worlds reused (consciously or unconsciously) in later times?
We are interested in contributions from a variety of disciplinary
backgrounds that discuss the construction of fantastical worlds in or
across different media (e.g., written narratives, drama, film,
television, video games). Papers may focus on single narratives,
authors, and periods, or discuss fantastical worldbuilding techniques
more broadly, e.g., from a theoretical, comparative or reception point
of view.
The workshop will take place in Amsterdam on the 30^th of June and the
1^st of July 2022. Should the state of the pandemic require it, the
workshop will be held on the same days as either a hybrid or a virtual
event.
We invite submissions for 25-minute presentations. To register your
interest, please submit an*anonymous abstract of max.**400
words*(excluding references and bibliography)
to*(constructingfantasticalworlds /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(constructingfantasticalworlds /at/ gmail.com)>*by the*15*^th ***of
March 2022*. Your name and affiliation should be included in the body of
your email. We aim to respond no later than the 15^thof April.
This workshop is generously funded byOIKOS, the National Research School
in Classical Studies in the Netherlands, and the gravitation project
Anchoring Innovation.
Please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions.
The organizing team: Caterina Fossi ((c.fossi /at/ uva.nl)
<mailto:(c.fossi /at/ uva.nl)>), Merlijn Breunesse ((m.r.e.breunesse /at/ uva.nl)
<mailto:(m.r.e.breunesse /at/ uva.nl)>) and Koen Vacano ((k.vacano /at/ uva.nl)
<mailto:(k.vacano /at/ uva.nl)>)
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