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[Commlist] CFP: I'll Sleep When I'm Undead: Sleep in 21st Century Horror Media (CORÉRISC/The Sociability of Sleep)
Tue Mar 14 15:16:37 GMT 2023
CALL FOR PARTICIPANTS
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I’ll Sleep When I’m Undead: Sleep in Contemporary Horror Media
July 2-7, 2023 in Montreal
DEADLINE: March 31, 2023
CORERISC: the Collective for Research on Epistemologies of Embodied
Risk, and The Sociability of Sleep seek participants for a week-long
writing workshop (July 2-7, 2023) centered on sleep in 21st century
horror media. We aim to explore how horror media–from films to
television to social media–responds to the conditions of sleep as a site
of embodied risk today.
Sleep today is said to be in crisis. Sleep is under threat by our 24/7
(Crary 2013) lifestyles; by demands of availability generated by social
media, the internet and the always-on of media themselves; by the blue
light of media screens, and the somatic reset of social media
addictions; and by the crisis cycle of the contemporary news media.
Sleep scientists are increasingly attending to longstanding inequities
of access to “good sleep”, unevenly distributed across the fracture
lines of social inclusion, and reflecting the environmental and cultural
impact of insecure sleep conditions, including excess noise and
illumination, rising temperatures under climate change, vulnerability to
assault, an increasing demands to be available for work or care. These
and other anxieties around sleep as a site of embodied risk are found
across the spectrum of 21st century horror media.
Beyond dreams and nightmares, sleep itself has a complex history in
horror media, in the remix of cinemas as a dream machine to a rich
visual and aural language for altered states that blur the line between
waking life and nightmare. While our focus is on 21st century media, we
also seek work that puts today’s bad sleepers in dialogue with the past
of sleep-horror media. Our premise is this: sleep is in essence a risky
business. Sleep is often seen as generating precarious situations, and
sleep itself is understood as a site of risk, vulnerability, and loss of
control and agency. Sleep’s horror affects enervate the sharp edges of
conventional horror, its eruptive distinctions between normal and
deviant, raising complex questions of creepy agency, resistance,
dispossession and vulnerability. Horror sleep media explores rest as a
space of work, the site of the relentless extraction of the body’s
capacities and biopolitical management, through monitoring and
modulation, or in other cases the only territory in which the
complexities and dangers of life today can be navigated as a new site of
survival. Rather than naming a novel state of affairs, feminist, queer,
and racialized sleep horror understands sleep not as a break in the
fabric of reality that allows a horrific otherworldliness to emerge, but
as the condition of the exhausting conditions of everyday life. Part of
the horror in the contemporary wave of sleep horror media is that the
waking/ dreaming binary is displaced by the grey zone of somatic
capitalism, where even off-hours are occupied by apps that track,
quantify and assess us while we sleep, for purposes not our own. How
does 21st century media figure the dispossessive risks of sleep?
This weeklong writing workshop is a collaboration between the
Sociability of Sleep interdisciplinary research-creation project and
CORÉRISC as part of the series "Altered States: The Social Lives of
Sleep". We seek four to five participants for a week-long writing
workshop in Montreal in the context of the Sociability of Sleep’s summer
exhibition/ InSomnolence/ (June 20-July 13, 2023). Participants will
arrive on Sunday. Monday through Friday will be dedicated to
collaborative and individual writing sessions, working towards the
publication of an edited collection. As such, we plan to work both with
individual chapters, and also to collectively shape the conversation
about sleep in contemporary horror. Each day will include two short
public talks from participants about their emergent research in sleep
horror along with writing workshops and end-of-day check-ins. In keeping
with the spirit of the workshop as a generative space, the week’s events
will include several activities meant to inspire discussion. The
Montreal Monstrum Society will co-host a public screening of a sleep
horror film; participants will be encouraged to suggest material to
screen and discuss; there will be a workshop on public scholarship on
popular media; and there is the possibility of creating a podcast
focusing on the sleep media that we watch and discuss together.
We seek proposals from workshop participants on topics such as:
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Sleep and Genre (horror, noir, fantastique, dark fantasy)
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Sleep and Media (cinema, television, short-form, social media)
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Poetics of Sleep Horror (form, tone, atmosphere, style, mode)
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Horror studies and sleep
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Sleep and Experimental Horror
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Sleep Horror as/and Ecology
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Sleep Horror and Technology
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Sleep Horror and Creep (climate creep, deep/geological time, scale)
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Somnolent affects: sleep and spectators
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(Sleep) media as a source of horror and risk
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Too much, too little: sleep out of scale
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Earlids and Eyelids: The Bleed of Sleep
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Sleep Horror and Crisis, Disruption, Disorder
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Lost sleep: insomnia and other absences (as awareness, as
problematic/symptom)
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Sleep Horror and Labour
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Retrovision: 21st century sleep horror frameworks recalling earlier
media forms
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Sleep and/in Horror Studies (concept, content, figuration)
Proposals should include:
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a one-page description of your potential chapter: topic, approach
and media (300-400 words)
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a short bio (150 words)
We welcome submissions from emerging scholars and contingent faculty, as
well as from researchers from underrepresented perspectives in horror
studies. There is funding available to support the participation of
scholars, prioritizing those without access to institutional support.
The workshop will take place in person in Montreal. If for you, travel
to Montreal is not a possibility but you wish to take part in the
_entire_ workshop, please indicate this in your application and we will
find accommodation for remote participation.
Proposals can be sent to (corerisc /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(corerisc /at/ gmail.com)>,
with the subject line “Undead Sleep Submissions”. Deadline is March 31,
2023. “I’ll Sleep When I’m Undead” is organized by CORÉRISC members
Lynn Kozak, Alanna Thain and Kristopher Woofter, in collaboration with
The Sociability of Sleep and is part of “Altered States: The Social
Lives of Sleep”, with support from the Fonds de recherche du Québec -
Société et culture and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research
Council of Canada.
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