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[Commlist] Call for Papers - international conference Bodies, Arts, and Media: (Re)Configurations in the Digital Era
Mon Apr 29 20:56:51 GMT 2024
***
The *IRMÉCCEN* (Sorbonne Nouvelle University) and *LabSIC* (Sorbonne
Paris Nord University) laboratories, *research committees 14* (Sociology
of Communication, Knowledge, and Culture), *37* (Sociology of the Arts),
and *54* (The Body in Social Sciences) of the *International
Sociological Association (ISA)*, as well as *research committees 38*
(Socio-anthropologie Politique: Médias et Cultures) and *33* (Sociologie
de la Communication et du Numérique) of the *Association Internationale
des Sociologues de Langue Française (AISLF)*, the *Cité du Genre*, and
the *Groupe de Travail “Genre et Espace Numérique” *of the *Centre
Internet et Société (CNRS)*, are jointly organizing the bilingual
(French and English) international conference entitled */“Bodies, Arts,
and Media: (Re)Configurations in the Digital Era”/*.
The body is both a physical and symbolic entity that characterizes the
human being (Le Breton, 2008). Although it is a private possession where
the most intimate biological and psychological activities of social
beings are expressed, it also serves as an artifact through which
individuals interact with the world and their peers. >From this
perspective, the body is influenced and shaped by social norms and
cultural discourses (Butler, 1993). These factors play a significant
role in society by setting specific expectations for the human body,
encouraging the construction of certain body types over others, and
shaping the relationships individuals are expected to maintain with
their own bodies. Thus, the body is subject to permanent norms and
injunctions, which vary according to different forms of marginalization
(gender, class, race, sexuality, age, etc.), contributing to the
formation of bodies that are considered more or less legitimate[1]
(Larochelle and Bourdeloie, 2023).
Unlike other concepts such as 'patriarchy' or 'gender,' which have
sparked considerable debate in gender studies, the notion of the 'body'
was long neglected by researchers in this field (Canning, 1999).
Although often implicitly present in studies related to subjects such as
reproduction, beauty, prostitution, and witchcraft, the body only truly
emerged as a subject of study in the 1980s (Turner, 1996).
As a site where power is exercised and manifested, but also contested
and resisted (Foucault, 1975), the body has been the subject of much
reflection and debate within gender studies (e.g., Ahmed, 2006; Alcoff,
2006; Bartky, 2020; Bordo, 2004; Davis, 1995; Haraway, 1991; hooks,
1992; McRobbie, 2008; Mulvey, 1975; Rich, 1980; Showalter, 1997; Wolf,
1991). It participates in the ritualization of femininity (Goffman,
1959) and the construction and mediation of masculinities (Connell,
1995), playing an essential role in gender performance and its
deconstruction (Butler, 1990, 1993; Halberstam, 1998, 2011; Halperin,
2002; Jagose, 1997; Kosofsky Sedgwick, 1990; Lorber, 1993; Rubin, 2006;
Wilchins, 2002).Feminist studies have long examined representations of
bodies in the arts and cultural industries, highlighting how these
representations contribute to the normalization of certain bodily norms
such as beauty, thinness, youth, and validity. They also underscore the
objectification of individuals, particularly women, which often impacts
how individuals perceive their own bodies (Clark, 1972; Davis, 2003;
Gill, 2006; Gill and Scharff, 2011; Gimlin, 2002; Grogan, 2016; hooks,
1995; Kilbourne, 2000; Merleau-Ponty, 2002; Paasonen, 2018; Thompson,
1994). However, it is important to emphasize that representation
constitutes a site of conflict between dominant and subaltern actors
(Macé, 2006). From this perspective, several case studies of bodily
representations confirm that the media are both instances of
/invisibilization/ and /visibilization/ (Voirol, 2005) of “illegitimate”
bodies (Koch-Rein et al., 2020; McLaren et al., 2021; Capuzza and
Spencer, 2017). It also emerges that the body constitutes a site where
gender norms are destabilized (e.g., Atkinson, 2014; Preez, 2009;
Kalogeropoulos Householder and Trier-Bieniek, 2016; Lapeyroux, 2023).
The analysis of bodily representations through the arts and cultural
industries is a profoundly political undertaking. The body, especially
that of people marginalized by prevailing social relations (e.g.,
gender, race, ableism), often falls under specific forms of knowledge
that legitimize prevailing social norms (Foucault, 1975). It becomes the
object of medicalization and pathologization in the public space
(Bartky, 2020; Showalter, 1997; Stoll and Egner, 2021). This is
particularly evident in the cultural industries, which then reinforce
the existing power relations (Farrell, 2011; Wykes and Gunter, 2005).
Moreover, the body serves as a physical vector through which individuals
express their political identities or challenge established norms
(Waskul and Vannini, 2020). In this way, the body becomes a site of
political struggle (Turner, 1996). Far from being immune to political
and social ideologies, media representations of the body can be
instrumentalized to influence public perceptions of political issues
(Grimes et al., 2008; Gamson, 1998).
Beyond representations of the body in the arts and media, the body plays
a central role as both a medium and site of artistic performance
(Goldberg, 2011; Jones, 1998; Jones and Stephenson, 1999; Jones and
Warr, 2006). Various art forms, such as dance, fashion, and theater,
have long been arenas where gender is both performed through the body
and challenged, offering spaces of resistance against oppressive gender
norms (Banes, 1987; Geczy and Karaminas, 2023; Halberstam, 2011;
Hausman, 1995). Although the body is today a widely explored object of
study, the rapid evolution of digital technologies and artificial
intelligence (AI), as well as the changes they bring to the arts and
cultural industries, present numerous challenges that require in-depth
reflection by researchers in the humanities and social sciences.
Digital technology, a double-edged sword (Bourdeloie, 2021), contributes
to amplifying and multiplying hegemonic discourses, particularly
regarding body standards (Tiggemann and Slater, 2013), yet it also helps
counteract them (Larochelle and Bourdeloie, in press). Digital platforms
cannot be considered neutral; they are often biased by algorithms that
favor the propagation of images conforming to dominant beauty ideals,
thus perpetuating the marginalization of bodies deemed “outside the
norm” (Ekström, 2021). Exposure to such discourses significantly affects
the social subjects who encounter them. Existing literature demonstrates
that exposure to idealized body images on digital platforms negatively
impacts the body perception of social subjects, particularly women
(Fardouly and Vartanian, 2016; Holland and Tiggemann, 2016; Rodgers and
Melioli, 2016). At the same time, these platforms provide a space for
the dissemination of pathologizing discourses about the body (Barker et
al., 2018; boyd, 2014; Yeshua-Katz and Martins, 2013). However, digital
platforms also offer a space where injunctions to normativity can be
contested, as evidenced by self-acceptance movements (e.g., body
positivity[2], skin positivity[3], hair positivity[4]) and trends such
as #whatIeatinadayasafatwoman[5] and #celebratemysize, which have
proliferated online since the 2010s (Sastre, 2014).
Digital technologies also reinforce body self-monitoring, notably
through the proliferation of digital platforms, wearable devices, and
other digital tools (Almalki et al., 2017; Ford and De Togni, 2021;
Lupton, 2016; Sharon and Zandbergen, 2017). Empirical studies have shown
that self-monitoring apps reinforce body stigmas (Ward et al., 2017) by
propagating conventional standards of appearance and well-being
(Ruckenstein and Pantzar, 2017). These apps impact self-image and
individuals' relationships with their bodies (Fletcher, 2023).
Conversely, empirical studies have also demonstrated that social
subjects develop resistance strategies against the body surveillance
imposed by digital technologies (Goodyear et al., 2017).
From an interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary perspective, this
conference aims to bring together researchers from diverse disciplines
such as sociology, information and communication sciences, gender
studies, cultural studies, anthropology, history, computational
sciences, political science, and others. It seeks to explore reflections
on bodies in the arts and media in the digital age. We strongly
encourage research that adopts an intersectional perspective and
intersects various social relations of oppression (e.g., gender,
sexuality, class, race, ableism, ageism). Papers may focus on (but are
not limited to) the following themes:
*Representations and discourses*
Research in this area aims to analyze representations and discourses
about the body in the arts and media in the digital age. In addition to
traditional arts and media, this area also explores the transformations
brought about by the development of digital cultural industries and
technologies. Areas covered include information media, /mediacultures/
(Maigret and Macé, 2005), the arts, fashion, and popular culture.
Similarly, proposals may examine the construction of discourses and
representations in digital media and institutional settings, such as the
medical profession. Specifically, proposals may explore how these
discourses and representations contribute to the pathologization of
minority and dysmorphic bodies—bodies that deviate from prevailing
bodily norms—and to the perpetuation of bodily normativity and
normalization.
*Reception/uses*
This area focuses on studying how representations and discourses about
the body are perceived and appropriated by audiences, broadly including
users (followers, etc.) of digital platforms, audiences of so-called
traditional media, and digital communities. The aim is to explore the
effects of these representations and discourses on individuals'
self-esteem and body image, as well as the tactics and strategies of
resistance, reversal, or circumvention implemented by audiences and
users to question and deconstruct diktats related to the body. In
particular, we are interested in studies focusing on the ways in which
bodies can be vehicles for political and subjective statements.
*Platform design and the co-construction dynamics of bodily norms*
This area focuses on the analysis of technological devices as sites
where bodily norms are produced, constructed, and contested. In
particular, it examines how the design - architecture, interface,
functionalities, visual appearance, accessibility, power dynamics,
discrimination bias, and technological transparency - of digital devices
(such as mobile health/wellness applications, platforms, social media,
and websites) contributes to producing and reproducing bodily norms. It
involves interrogating the co-construction of devices and norms by
considering the reciprocal interactions and dynamics between humans and
“non-humans” in this process (Boullier, 2018).
*Performance in the digital age*
The body plays a central role as a tool for performance, with the notion
of "performance" encompassing both artistic and identity-related
aspects. This approach aims to examine how individuals perform and/or
deconstruct social identities through their bodies and subversive
practices (e.g., drag) and how these performances manifest in a digital
context. Additionally, this approach examines transformations in
performance art. For example, some musicians plan to perform on stage as
holograms, thus perpetuating the musical experience despite their aging
(Guibert, 2024). This development raises questions about the influence
of technological tools on artistic performance and how it is
experienced, appropriated, and interpreted by the audiences it reaches.
*Epistemology, methods, and ethics*
This line of inquiry focuses on the analysis of the body as an
epistemology, a method of investigation and inquiry, an observable and a
reflexive “tool” in ethical matters. Bodies reflect moral and hygienic
norms but are also sites of power—subject to legislative, moral, social,
and health concerns—and thus serve as instruments for analyzing social
phenomena (Canning, 1999). The body therefore serves as a method for
analyzing social change in the public arena (ibid.). We are also
concerned here with the epistemological, ethical, and methodological
issues involved in analyzing the social aspects of the body.
*_Submission guidelines:_*
Paperproposalsshouldnotexceed*500words(excludingbibliography)*andshouldbesubmittedinEnglishorFrenchby*June1^st
,2024*(tobodiesartsandmedia /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(bodiesartsandmedia /at/ gmail.com)>
Responses to paper proposals will be sent by e-mail on July 1^st , 2024.
_Format:_
Thefileshould
besentindocorodtformatandentitledNAME_Firstname_TitleOfTheCommunication_CONUM2024.
This document will contain the following:
names, last names, emails, affiliations, title ofpaper,abstract́.
_Conferencedates_: 5 – 6 December, 2024
_Conference venue_: Maison de la recherche (4, rue des Irlandais 75005,
Paris - France), “Claude Simon” room
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_Membersofthescientificcommittee:_
Helena ALVIAR,SciencesPo
Simon APARTIS,CentreInternetetSociété,CNRS
Audrey BANEYX,Sciences Po
Philippe BOUQUILLION, Sorbonne Paris Nord University
Hélène BOURDELOIE, Sorbonne Paris Nord University
Hélène BREDA,SorbonneParisNord University
Solenne CAROF,SorbonneUniversity
Omar CERILLO,MonterreyInstituteofTechnologyandAdvancedStudies,Sociology
Christiana CONSTANTOPOULOU,PanteionUniversity
Laurence CORROY, University of Lorraine
Jérôme COURDURIÈS,ToulouseJeanJaurèsUniversity
Sophie DUBEC,SorbonneNouvelleUniversity
Delphine DUPRÉ,SorbonneNouvelleUniversity
Dulce MariaFILGUEIRADEALMEIDA, University ofBrasília
Gérôme GUIBERT,SorbonneNouvelleUniversity
Lena HÜBNER,University ofOttawa
Nicole JENKINS, Howard University / Harvard University
Rym KIRECHE-GERWIG,CELSA
Joëlle KIVITZ,UniversitéParisCité
Natacha LAPEYROUX, UniversitéLibredeBruxelles
Dimitra Laurence LAROCHELLE, Sorbonne Nouvelle University
Éric MAIGRET, SorbonneNouvelleUniversity
Mélanie MILLETTE, Université du Québec à Montréal
Camila MOREIRA CESAR, Sorbonne Nouvelle University
Nelly QUEMENER, CELSA
Ilaria RICCIONI,FreeUniversityofBolzano
José RUIZ SAN ROMAN, Complutense University of Madrid
Zeineb TOUATIBENALI, NantesUniversity
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[1]Illegitimate bodies can be those that carry a stigma (disabled,
trans, fat, skinny, sick, etc.); in other words, any mark of difference
likely to discriminate against an individual. These bodies tend to be
invisibilized in contemporary societies (Botta, 2000). However, the same
cannot be said of dominant bodies (white, thin, able-bodied,
heterosexual, etc.).
[2]The movement in question aims for the acceptance and appreciation of
all human bodies. Its originslie in the /Fat Acceptance /movement, which
emerged in the United States in the 1960s. This
movementadvocatedrespectforthe rightsofoverweightpeople (Wann, 2009).
[3]The"skinpositivity"movementpromotesacceptanceandappreciationofallskintypes.
[4]The "hair positivity" movement promotes acceptance and appreciation
of all hair types.
[5]What I Eat in a Day" content contains normative messages about diet
and weight (Pfender et al., 2023), often encouraging dieting and body
monitoring, as well as idealizing bodies that conform to prevailing
beauty standards (e.g., "what I eat in a day as a model", etc.).
However, in an effort to subvert the stigma attached to corpulence,
larger content creators produce content such as "What I eat in a day as
a fat woman". Such content seeks to offload the moral aspect often
associated with foods labeled as "bad", as well as the guilt that
accompanies their consumption. The aim is to shed light on everyday
eating practices that depart from diet culture (Larochelle and
Bourdeloie, in press).
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