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[Commlist] CFP - Deciphering censorship. From regulation to the production of invisibilities, from the archive to the Internet: an interdisciplinary approach
Tue Jan 03 12:34:39 GMT 2023
Call for Papers: Deciphering censorship. From regulation to the
production of invisibilities, from the archive to the Internet: an
interdisciplinary approach
*Lisbon, National Library of Portugal, September 7th and 8th, 2023. *
According to search trends on Google, the Portuguese/Spanish word
“censura” and “censorship” in English portray the importance of their
correlation with social media platforms, (YouTube, Twitter, Facebook,
etc.) and famous young women in Latin languages (Miley Cyrus, Megan Fox,
Emma Watson and Lindsay Lohan are on Top 20 correlated searches, between
2004-2022). These two major themes, the economy and moral norms, show
how censorship remains a question to be dealt in the present.
Nevertheless, such phenomena are hardly new. These phenomena, both
economic and moral in nature, have accompanied the public and private
sphere institutional regulation process, ever since, following the
invention of the press, intermittent persecution of heretics was
replaced by systematic control of printed material. Indeed, historical
perspective enables observing censorship methodologies’ reorganisation
in step with media technological development: cinema drove the age
rating system (Robertson 2005), telegrams and, subsequently, telephone
calls entailed flexibility in the controls exercised by institutions and
agents of censorship.
Despite censorship depicting a quintessential display of the exercising
of power, which is historically wielded by influential subjects,
managers of public space, economic processes, and political institutions
(Martin 2016), consensus around the meaning of the word censorship has
crumbled in recent decades (Müller 2004; Moore 2013; Darnton 2014).
This collapse first came to the fore in the context of the ‘Culture
Wars’ of the 1980s and 1990s when American liberal academics, anchored
in theoretical approaches stemming from the works of Michel Foucault
(1978) and Pierre Bourdieu (1991), demonstrated the existence of
censorial phenomena within democratic contexts (cf. Burt 1994; Post 1998).
The new approaches to censorship continue to accept that States may
exercise direct control (repression) while also beginning to identify
censorial dimensions of indirect control that may be deployed (through
financing, education, public history, etc.) and, above all, starting to
demand direct state intervention in the regulation of private powers
exercising constraints on the freedom of expression (Post 1998). This
includes the forms of “market censorship” that induce selfcensorship
(Jansen 1988) or policies of “don’t ask, don’t tell” imposed on gay
members of the U.S. Army between 1994-2011, enveloping them in a type of
annulment embedded into the structure of societies (Butler 1998). This
embedded character of censorship in society has been labeled
“constitutive” or “structural” censorship in opposition to that wielded
by institutions such as the state or the church, i.e., regulatory
censorship. Within this scope, the recent issues surrounding “cancel
culture”, the “woke” approaches to culture, and the biases of algorithms
demonstrate how this phenomenon is socially structural.
Hence the need to scrutinize such phenomena in order to scientifically
distinguish between, on the one hand, censorial processes and, on the
other hand, conservative discourses that – faced with the emergence of
voices legitimately demanding new spaces for communication -,
instrumentally deploy allegations of some claimed censorship to conserve
privileges and monopolies. Therefore, we need to differentiate between
boycotts and censorship, because they do not emerge from the same places
in the power system.
We are aware that participation in a conference that seeks to foster a
global/international approach to studying censorship not only has
inherent implications for the study of this specific field, but also
constitutes a challenge to academia that, by thinking globally, runs
into the material limitations imposed by the present moment
contingencies of the academic system, with all of its peripheries, and
the social and political pressures that shape intellectual production
and dissemination.
Communication proposals We would invite all parties interested in this
theme to participate in the conference across any of the four axes
detailed below. Nevertheless, there is an openness to other proposals
that set out new paths and, hence, the framework below is in no way
exhaustive.
*Axis 1 – Analytical models and methodologies *
How to approach the interferences of the different codes inherent to
censorship? On the one hand, the society idealised by the institution,
the one hypothetically resulting from strict compliance with the
regulatory norms and, on the other hand, the actually existing society,
with its references, prohibitions, plural resistances and creativity in
answer to the invisibility of censorship? We are especially interested
in models that explore the diversity of actors, contexts, and
implications of censorship in interpersonal relationships (family,
intimate, labour and social interactions).
*Axis 2 – Framework for the factor of international circulation *
The introduction of the circulation variable enables a questioning of
national boundaries in the study of censorship. This axis prioritises
those approaches that focus on the transnational and comparative
aspects, whether introducing the notion of flow or focusing on the
circulation of censorship, the censored and their forms of resistance.
*Axis 3 - Meta-analysis *
With censorship constituting a dimension that challenges the
interpretative capacities of different actors, it would be remiss of
researchers not to question their own respective subjectivity and
capacity for analysis. What role does interpretative error occupy in the
studies on censorship? How to navigate among the intentions of actors,
producers, the censor's interpretative skills, and the diverse
subsequent interpretative layers?
*Axis 4 – Implications of censorship*
Censorial practices represent a point of entry into the analysis of
power, culture, and political, religious, and artistic constructions. We
seek to introduce this variable into the production of political,
economic, social and cultural history.
*Keynote speaker*: Prof. Nicole Moore, University of New South Wales
(UNSW) Canberra
Nicole Moore is Professor in English and Media Studies at UNSW Canberra.
From September 2022 to July 2023, she is the Visiting Professor of
Australian Studies in the Centre for American and Pacific Studies at the
University of Tokyo. Her main research interest is Australian
literature, combined with interdisciplinary and comparative research in
cultural history, gender and sexuality studies, and book history, with a
special interest in censorship. Her 2012 book The Censor's Library:
Uncovering the Lost History of Australia's Banned Books won the Walter
McCrae Russell award from the Association for the Study of Australian
Literature. Recent Edited collections pursue the topics of global
literary censorship or Australian Literature in the German Democratic
Republic. Her research pursues issues at stake in the political cultures
of writing and reading, and the complex relations of literature,
governance and history within and across national boundaries. Prof.
Moore has held visiting fellowships at the Menzies Centre, Kings College
London; the Faculty of English, University of Cambridge; the National
Archives of Australia, and the Humanities Research Centre, Australian
National University. From 2018 to 2022, she was Associate Dean for UNSW
Canberra's Special Collections, fostering research, curation and
partnerships utilising the rich manuscript materials and rare books in
UNSW Canberra's world class collections.
*Submission of proposals *
Proposals should be no longer than 400 words, include a title and be
accompanied by a short biography (max. of 100 words).
The working languages are Portuguese, Spanish, French and English.
E-mail for submissions: (decifrandocensuras /at/ fcsh.unl.pt)
<mailto:(decifrandocensuras /at/ fcsh.unl.pt)>
*Submission deadline: April 30th, 2023 *
No payment from the authors will be required
Organising committee Adalberto Fernandes (IHC/IN2PAST, NOVA-FCSH), Andru
Chiorean (National University of Political Science and Public
Administration, Romania), Daniel Melo (CHAM, NOVA-FCSH), Mélanie
Toulhoat (IHC/IN2PAST, NOVA-FCSH), Rita Luís (IHC/IN2PAST, NOVA-FCSH)
and Rui Lopes (IHC/IN2PAST, NOVA-FCSH)
*References*
Bourdieu, Pierre (1991). Language and Symbolic power. Cambridge: Polity
Press.
Burt, Richard (ed.) (1994). The Administration of Aesthetics:
Censorship, Political Criticism and the Public Sphere, Minnesota:
University of Minnesota Press.
Butler, Judith (1998). “Ruled out: vocabularies of the censor”. In: R.
Post (ed.), Censorship and silencing: practices of cultural regulation,
(247-259) LA: Getty research institute for the history of art.
Foucault, Michel (1978). The History of Sexuality: An Introduction. New
York: Pantheon Books.
Darnton, Robert (2014). Censors at work. How States Shaped Literature.
NY: WW Norton. Jansen, Sue. (1988). Censorship: The Knot that Binds
Power and Knowledge, New York: Oxford University Press.
Moore, Nicole (2013). “Censorship Is”. Australian Humanities Review,
54:45–65.
Müller, Beate (ed.) (2004). Censorship and Cultural Regulation in Modern
Age, Amesterdam/NY: Brill/Rodopi.
Martin, Laurent (ed.) (2016). Les Censures dans le Monde. XIXe-XXIe
siècle. Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes.
Post, Robert (ed.) (1998). Censorship and Silencing: Practices of
Cultural Regulation. LA: Getty research institute for the history of Art
and the Humanities.
Robertson, Jim (2005). The Hidden Cinema British film censorship in
action, 1913–1975 (e-library). Routledge.
Conference organised as part of the research project CEMA -
Censorship(s):an analytic model of censorial processes
(EXPL/COM-OUT/0831/2021) funded by National funds through FCT — Fundação
para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, I.P. The IHC is funded by National funds
through FCT — Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, I.P., under the
projects UIDB/04209/2020, UIDP/04209/2020, and LA/P/0132/2020. Rita
Luís, Mélanie Toulhoat and Rui Lopes are funded by National funds
through FCT — Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia, I.P., under the
projects CEECIND/02813/2017, 2021.03948.CEECIND, and 2021.04264.CEECIND,
respectively
*Links to the CFP:*
https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/en/events/deciphering-censorship/
<https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/en/events/deciphering-censorship/>
https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/2023-09-07_Decifrando-Censuras_CFP-EN_web.pdf
<https://ihc.fcsh.unl.pt/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/2023-09-07_Decifrando-Censuras_CFP-EN_web.pdf>
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