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[Commlist] Combined CfP Global Humanities 10 and 11: "Looking for Aura in the 21st Century" and "Dining Out"
Thu Feb 17 11:29:55 GMT 2022
Global Humanities (ISSN: 2199-3939) new calls.
CfP
LOOKING FOR AURA IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Global Humanities, Vol. 10 (Fall 2022)
https://www.edizionimuseopasqualino.it/riviste/global-humanities/
<https://www.edizionimuseopasqualino.it/riviste/global-humanities/>
Double blind peer reviewed
No payment from the authors will be required
The biannual journal Global Humanities (ISSN: 2199-3939) issued by
Edizioni Museo Pasqualino, the publishing house of the Museo
Internazionale delle Marionette Antonio Pasqualino, Italy, in print and
open access, looks for proposals for its forthcoming issue (Fall 2022).
The journal continues its attempt to strengthen interdisciplinary
research in Humanities in relation to its topical issues. For the fall
2022, volume 10 is planned to deal with the topic “Looking for aura in
the 21st Century”.
86 years have passed since the publication of the Benjamin’s pivotal
work ([1936] 1968) entitled Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner
technischen Reproduzierbarkeit (The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical
Reproduction) where he introduces the concept of aura, referring to a
quality allegedly missed by the mechanically reproduced work of art,
that of its uniqueness, defined by its presence in time and space, at
the place where it happens to be located. Such a definition involves a
number of philosophical and æsthetical problems related at least to the
dichotomies of truth/false, authentic/inauthentic, unique/serial,
beautiful/ugly, artistic/kitsch, which emerge as of central importance
in the contemporary debate. Borrowed from a religious lexicon commonly
used in Religious studies (see the concept of Holy as defined by Otto
[1917] 1923), all along the last century, this idea has been widely
investigated and discussed by the Æsthetic theory (see, as an initial
glance on the current debate, Di Giacomo, M., Marchetti, eds., 2013) and
Sociological and Media Theory (from Weber [1922] 1947– see the parallel
notion of charisma – to Bourdieu ([1979] 1984, up to the debate over
mass and more recently digital media). In particular, the Semiotic
discipline within a wider philosophical debate concerning a Structural
Theory of Culture, has developed an original reflection on these themes,
from the founding contributions of Baudrillard (1972), Eco ([1985]
1990), Lotman (1987), Greimas (1980, 1987), Prieto ([1988] 1989), Fabbri
(2010) and to the latest interventions of Dondero (2007), Latour ([2008]
2011), Fontanille (2015) and many others, insisting on the semiotic
procedures able to create an effect of aura as their outcome.
But the present time enlightens new emerging nuances in this concept
which are well worth being investigated. The forthcoming issue of GH
seeks to assess these in more detail. Aura has, nowadays, largely
flooded the traditional theoretical fence of concept in the theory of
Art in which has been usually confined, to show up as a general and
eminently political issue. Following the ongoing process of artification
(Heinich and Shapiro 2012) of daily life, the problem of the
construction/translation/migration/dissipation of the aura shows up in
management terms. Long-standing queries as the ones concerning the role
played by technologies in its designation find new challengers in the
increasingly invasive state of the mediatization process (e.g. Immersive
and Locative Media, Virtual Reality, Instagram, new platforms like the
Metaverse etc.). However, authenticity becomes an issue in political
communication (how do current populist politicians construct their
aura/charisma, becoming credible for large audiences? How do specific
rhetorical assets like, for instance, political correctness may
enforce/undermine aura?), Space (what is a square, a village, a city, a
retail space, a place called authentic?), in Cultural Heritage (to what
extent an object, a custom, an identity-related practice earn the
quality of being considered as authentic?), Tourism (what does it make a
travel authentic?), Gastronomy (how does specific dishes or ingredients
become authentic expression of a territory or community?). At least,
what does it make a life authentic?
We therefore ask scholars at any step of their academic career to submit
paper proposals for analyses focused on specific texts and practices
which happen to determine aura.
Suggested areas of investigation are:
* Aura and Benjamin in the 21st Century (referring to the letter of the
Benjamin’s text in light of evidencing any problematic aspect in
explicating the present time);
* Aura in Religious daily life;
* Aura in the Digital Sphere;
* Aura of Artifacts and Cultural Heritage;
* Aura in the New Forms of Politics;
* Aura in Tourism;
* Aura and the Pandemic;
* Aura in Experience and Daily Life.
With regard to time period and theoretical approach, this call for
papers is totally open.
Please send your paper proposals (max. 300 words and a short
biographical note) to Francesco Mangiapane
((francesco.mangiapane /at/ unipa.it) <mailto:(francesco.mangiapane /at/ unipa.it)>)
and Frank Jacob ((frank.jacob /at/ nord.no) <mailto:(frank.jacob /at/ nord.no)>) by
May 15, 2022.
Full papers are due by June 30, 2020 and should have a lenght of
6,000-8,000 words.
A style sheet will be provided together with a decision about the
proposals by May 25.
Minimal reference list
Baudrillard, J., 1972, Pour une critique de l’économie politique du
signe, Paris, Gallimard.
Benjamin, W., [1936] 1968, “The work of art in the Age of Mechanichal
Reproduction” in Illumination, New York, Schocken Books, pp. 217-251.
Bourdieu, P., [1979] 1984, Distinction: A Social Critique of the
Judgement of Taste, Cambridge, Harvard University Press.
Calabrese, O., 1987, L’età neobarocca, Roma-Bari, Laterza.
Di Giacomo, M., Marchetti, eds., 2013, Aura, monographic issue of
Rivista di estetica, n. 52.
Dondero, M. G., 2007, Fotografare il sacro. Indagini semiotiche, Roma,
Meltemi.
Eco, U., [1985] 1990, “Interpreting Serials” in The Limits of
Interpretation, University of Indiana Press, Bloomington, pp. 83-100.
Fabbri, P., 2010, “Quando è arte?”, foreword to Goodman 2010.
Fontanille, J., 2015, Formes de vie, Liège, Presses Universitaires de Liège.
Goodman, N., 1968, Languages of Art. An Approach to a Theory of Symbols,
Indianapolis,The Bobbs-Merril Company, especially pp.99-110.
Goodman, N., 2010, Arte in teoria, arte in azione, Et al., Milano.
Greimas, A. J., 1980, “La provocation par défi”, in A. J. Greimas et I.
Darrault (dir.), Figures de la manipulation, Paris, Autres. Now in A. J.
Greimas, Du sens II. Essais sémiotiques. Seuil, Paris, 1983, pp. 213-223.
Greimas, A. J., 1987, De l'imperfection, Périgueux, P. Fanlac.
Latour, B., [2008] 2011, “The Migration of the Aura – or How to Explore
the Original Through Its Facsimiles” in T. Bartscherer and R. Coover
(eds.) Switching Codes. Thinking Through Digital Technology in the
Humanities and the Arts, University of Chicago Press, pp. 275-297 (with
Adam Lowe).
Lotman, Y., 1987, “Architecture in the context of culture”. Architecture
and Society (??????????? ? ????????) [Sofia] 6: 8–15. [Parallel text in
Russian.]
Otto, R., [1917] 1923, The Idea of the Holy. An Inquiry into the
Non-Rational Factor in the Idea of the Divine and its Relation to the
Rational, London, Oxford University Press.
Perullo, N., 2020, Epistenology: Wine As Experience, New York, Columbia
University Press.
Prieto, L. J., [1988] 1989, “The Myth of the Original. The Original as
an Object of Art and as an Object for Collection”. Kunst & Museum
Journaal n.2/3, 1989, pp. 33-45.
Shapiro, R., Heinich, N., 2012, “When is artification?”. Contemporary
Aesthetics, Special Volume n. 4.
Weber, M. [1922] 1947, “The Nature of Charismatic Authority and its
Routinization” in Theory of Social and Economic Organization, New York:
Oxford University Press.
CfP
DINING OUT
Global Humanities, Vol. 11 (Spring 2023)
https://www.edizionimuseopasqualino.it/riviste/global-humanities/
<https://www.edizionimuseopasqualino.it/riviste/global-humanities/>
Double blind peer reviewed
No payment from the authors will be required
The biannual journal Global Humanities (ISSN: 2199-3939) issued by
Edizioni Museo Pasqualino, the publishing house of the Museo
Internazionale delle Marionette Antonio Pasqualino, Italy, in print and
open access, looks for proposals for its forthcoming issue (Spring 2023).
The journal continues its attempt to strengthen interdisciplinary
research in Humanities in relation to its topical issues. For the spring
2023, volume 11 is planned to deal with the topic “Dining out”.
A famous line from When Harry met Sally (1989) ironically remarks that
“restaurants are to people in the 80’s what theatres were to people in
the 60's”. Dining out – be it for a lunch-break, a business dinner, a
romantic meeting or a solitary resolution – may be considered as a
social ritual filled with significance. The celebration of which may,
through this path, be enquired as a moment of self-exposure where the
social limen among public and private, individual and collective
identity are constantly negotiated. Such a socializing practice of daily
life reveals its power through æsthetic means: endorsing a determined
regime of good manners by choosing who to eat with, how to behave and
dress, when and what to eat and where to dine out results into a
sensitive and intrinsically political asset, outcome of specific choices
still at hand of the individual.
It’s not a case that huge social challenges such as sustainability,
ecologism, social justice, cultural heritage recognition and many others
pass by the preference we might or might not accord to an actual diner.
By showing ourselves eating in public, more generally, we take a
position in respect of essential dichotomies such as the already
mentioned Individual vs Collective, Public vs Private and, henceforth,
Identity vs Alterity, Gemeinschaft (community) vs Gesellschaft
(society), Cosmopolitanism vs Localism, Social Commitment vs
Disengagement, Fast vs Slow and many others. Dining out, however, is
also a way to mark temporality, exposing it to the collective:
festivities, celebrations, marriage engagements, funerals are all events
which are not unusual being celebrated outdoors at convivial spots.
In their essence, the minimal political choices which construct the
experience of dining out are volatile, elusive and unseizable. They
generally combine up to conform into a certain je ne sais quoi, proper
atmospheres (see Griffero [2010] 2016) whose formal mechanisms are
difficult to catch but yet full of consequences. These atmospheres
happen, therefore, to solidify into actual ambiances, settings,
buildings, streets, districts, so called foodscapes (see Giannitrapani
2021), continuously reshaping the city, marking its essence and, in a
way, even its stereotype: what would remain of Paris without its
celebrated and fancy atmosphere celebrated in the diners all over?
Media play an essential role on such processes, by disambiguating what
is innately elusive for the mere fact of attesting it into a certain
text: reviews, advertising, novels, movies, social media streams, may,
in this sense, be considered as textual patterns targeted to give
substance to the sense of dining out, in a great conversation which
calls to participation. And, of course, a proper “army” of interpreters
are usually entitled to intercede in such a mission: critics,
intellectuals, writers, owners and clients…
The editors of GH ask scholars at any step of their academic career to
submit paper proposals related to analyses of actual (or fictional)
eateries around the world which they consider special. Following this
sentiment, they are asked to embedd these dining-out ventures into a
theoretical frame: why are they so special? How do they work as a social
machine? How does their location, their spaces, their clients, their
settings make sense? How does such meaning get acknowledged in the
public sphere?
The forthcoming issue (Spring 2023) is expected to provide insights into
places around the world which are questioned for their social
accountability, revealing their usually undisputed and mostly silent
role as constructors of daily life.
With regard to time period and theoretical approach, this call for
papers is totally open.
Please send your paper proposals (max. 300 words and a short
biographical note) to Francesco Mangiapane
((francesco.mangiapane /at/ unipa.it) <mailto:(francesco.mangiapane /at/ unipa.it)>)
and Frank Jacob ((frank.jacob /at/ nord.no) <mailto:(frank.jacob /at/ nord.no)>) by
October 15, 2022.
Papers are due by December 31, 2022 and should have a lenght of
6,000-8,000 words.
A style sheet will be provided together with a decision about the
proposals by October 25.
Minimal reference list
Appelbaum, R., 2011, Dishing it out, London, Reaktion Books.
Colas-Blaise, M., 2012, “L’experience gastronomique. Comment faire
signifier la nourriture?”, in G. Marrone, A. Giannitrapani, eds.,
Mangiare: istruzioni per l’uso: Indagini semiotiche, monographic issue
of E/C, n. 14, pp. 25-34.
Finkelstein, J., 1989, Dining out. A Sociology of Modern Manners,
Cambridge, Polity Press.
Finkelstein, J., 2014, Fashioning Appetite. Restaurants and the Making
of Modern Identity, New York, Columbia University Press.
Fischler, C., 1993, L’Homnivore. Le goût, la cuisine et le corps, Paris,
Odile Jacob.
Giannitrapani, A., “Ristoranti & co. Identità e comunicazione dei luoghi
conviviali”, in G. Marrone, ed., Buono da pensare, Milano, Carocci.
Giannitrapani, A., ed., 2021, Foodscapes. Cibo in città, Milano, Mimesis.
Gopnik, A., 2011, The Table comes First. France, and the Meaning of
Food, New York, Random House.
Griffero, T., [2010] 2016, Atmospheres. Aesthetics of Emotional Spaces,
London, Routledge.
Mangiapane, “The Invention of the Nordic Cuisine”,
Nordicum-Mediterraneum, https://doi.org/10.33112/nm.11.1.37
<https://doi.org/10.33112/nm.11.1.37>
Marrone, G., 2014, Gastromania, Milano, Bompiani.
Marrone, G., ed., 2021, Dossier: “Formes de la commensalité :
dispositifs rituels autour du manger”, Actes sémiotiques, n. 124.
Perullo, N., 2019, Del giudicar veloce e vacuo. Metacritica della
critica gastronomica, Formigine (MO, Edizioni Estemporanee.
Pitte, J.R. 1999. “The rise of the Restaurant”, in J.-L. Flandrin, M.
Montanari, A. Sonnenfeld, Food: A Culinary History from Antiquity to the
Present, New York, Columbia University Press.
Ritzer, G., The McDonaldization of Society. An investigation into the
Changing Character of Contemporary Social Life, Thousand Oaks, Pine
Forge Press.
Spang, R. (2000) The Invention of the Restaurant. Paris and Modern
Gastronomy Culture, Cambridge, Harvard University Press.
GLOBAL HUMANITIES
ISSN: 2199-3939
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