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[Commlist] "Mirror/Mirror" seminar at ACLA — cfp
Mon Sep 11 12:59:14 GMT 2023
We're accepting paper proposals for the following seminar at the ACLA
annual meeting, which will be held in Montreal, March 14–17, 2024
Mirror / Mirror <https://www.acla.org/node/43014>
Organizers: Hilary Bergen (The New School), Sandra Huber (Concordia
University)
What is the significance of the mirror in literature, philosophy, and
interdisciplinary humanities? Often attributed to Hephaestus, the Greek
god of fire and metal, the mirror can be traced back to ancient Egypt,
Mycenea, Greece, Etruria, and Rome. Our English word “mirror” comes from
the Latin /mirari/, to wonder or marvel at. Rife with taboos, omens, and
secrets, the mirror draws our imagination through its reflective surface
and into its churning depths. From Sylvia Plath’s speaking mirror, to
Jacques Lacan’s mirror stage, to Michel Foucault’s mirror-as-heterotopia
(a non-place or passage), to Sylvia Wynter’s idea of mimesis and the
reproduction of capital M-Man, mirrors have long fascinated writers and
thinkers.
Because the mirror gives us a “virtual” image, it is both reflective and
productive. Today, the act of mirroring draws further technological
significance with the rise of AI, chatGPT, and other virtual entities
that both learn through mimesis and /reflect/ human society, with all
its potentials and shortcomings, back to us. Mirrors hold
contradictions: as objects on a wall, they perform cold surveillance; as
screens on the devices we carry with us, they are marked with our body
heat. The mirror suggests that on its other side is the unreflected, the
unthought, the double, the Other, the shadow, the unconscious.
Mirror/mirror.
Our seminar will draw together discourses of the mirror in comparative
literature and the (broad) humanities. We are interested in the mirror,
not just as symbol, but as an object that gathers various uses and
practices. What kinds of subjectivities, positionalities, and
communities does the mirror create (and uncreate)? For example, dancers
use mirrors in acquiring technique; magical practitioners use mirrors in
divination; consciousness-raising feminists of the 1970s used
mirrors–namely the speculum–for vaginal self-examination; and special
effects technicians use mirrors to create ghost-like holograms. The rise
of social media-proliferated selfies and the practical use of video apps
like Zoom have made it so that our faces are mirrored back to us nearly
everywhere we look. Although the function of the mirror has changed
across history, associations with subjecthood, magic, and the slippery
boundary between truth and deception remain.
We invite proposals on the significance of the mirror. Possible
approaches could include (but are not limited to):
* The role of the mirror in contemporary fiction and film
* The mirror in discourses of science, technology, and media
* The mirror and its relatives (the screen, the mimetic interface) in
the creation of modern desires and anxieties
* The history of self-portraiture as a practice of mirroring
* Mirroring and mimesis, particularly in critical race theory,
feminist studies, queer studies, disability studies
* The mirror as either magical and/or domestic item: its relation to
both /heimlich/ and /unheimlich/ realms
Submit your abstract through the ACLA portal here:
https://www.acla.org/node/43014 <https://www.acla.org/node/43014>
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