[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP: Urban Mediations: International Conference on the Narratives, Ecologies, and Poetics of the City
Tue May 07 14:01:51 GMT 2024
*Urban Mediations: International Conference on the Narratives,
Ecologies, and Poetics of the City (Hong Kong, 5-6 December 2024)*
**
*City University of Hong Kong, Kowloon Tong, 5 December 2024*
*The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Sha Tin, 6 December 2024*
**
This international, interdisciplinary conference aims to uncover
emergent frameworks and methods for the interpretation and analysis of
literary, filmic, and cultural texts relating to the profound
transformation of cities around the world across the 19th, 20th, and
21st centuries.
Our starting point for discussion is cities in Asia and their dialogues
with different cities in the world. While “urban” typically denotes a
geographical location and its inhabitants, we use it to indicate a
process and practice of co-existence. The urban, in this sense, is
informed by socio-cultural, economic, ecological, political, and
technological processes that may appear or aspire to be global but that
are, in fact, diversely lived and experienced.
The framework “urban mediations” offers a way of thinking about "the
urban” not as a bounded, stable object, but as an intermediary agency
that is both specific to a particular milieu and connected to people and
processes elsewhere. “Mediation” extends recent work on urban
infrastructure – the physical systems of connectivity that keep cities
moving – to include the social, affective, aesthetic, and material
relations that bind the urban to itself and to myriad elsewheres. For
Lauren Berlant (2022: 22), infrastructure “is another way of talking
about mediation—but always as a material process of binding, never
merely as a material technology, aesthetic genre, form, or norm that
achieves something.” Like the urban, mediation “is not a stable thing
but a way of seeing the unstable relations among dynamically related
things.”
Asia is a rich, highly diverse region that can be used as a focal point
for exploring the uneven, often unpredictable mediations that constitute
urban life. Many of the cities in the region emerged, or were shaped by,
what Lasse Heerten (2021:351) describes as the “first globalisation in
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries…the heyday of colonial
Empire and steam technologies.” The enhanced interconnectivity,
especially since the nineteenth century, has contributed to the
circulation of things, objects, ideas, and, for Su Lin Lewis (2016:140),
the formation of the “cosmopolitan publics” and “print-worlds,” which
often intersect with those that exist in cities and regions in different
parts of the world in both physical and symbolic terms. The
contradictions, tension, and the co-existence of opportunities and
challenges in cities have become sources of inspiration for writers and
artists across the world and historical periods to represent, reveal,
and respond to different topical issues and conflicts.
Scholarship on Asian cities tends to be framed within a discourse of
economic development. On the one hand, studies have highlighted how
cities in the region have been and will become key drivers of economic
growth in our urban future, with Tokyo, Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen,
Hong Kong, Seoul and Singapore as long-standing economic hubs and
emerging cities such as Mumbai, Delhi, Jakarta, Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh
City, Dubai, and Abu Dhabi as sites of more recent investment and
development. On the other hand, many of these same cities are challenged
by issues of overdevelopment, such as congestion, pollution,
overcapacity, hyperinflation, extreme weather, aging populations, and
shifting demographics.
Other scholars, such as Abdoulmaliq Simone (2004, 2010, 2022), Asef
Bayat (2000,2013), Ravi Sundaram (2009), and Ara Wilson (2016), have
written about how informality in urban environments affords agency to
urban residents who are dispossessed of resources and livelihoods
because of poverty or displacement. Divested of access to suitable
infrastructures because of government corruption or ineptness,
residents, across different historical and social contexts, have
explored ways to improvise, poach, or hack obsolete or damaged
technologies by collaborating with each other. These creative practices
of inhabiting the city have been echoed in the work of writers,
filmmakers, architects, and artists who have experimented with new forms
of collaboration, aesthetics, and community within and across cities for
the past two centuries.
As such, issues relating to urban environments, in Asia and elsewhere,
are not simply issues of policy planning and resource management but
require new ideas from the arts and humanities to comprehend the
epistemological, cultural, and ecological impact of rapid urban changes.
We hope that by exchanging thoughts and asking questions together we can
develop new critical and creative frameworks that engage with different
historical moments, address the challenges facing our urban futures, and
shed light on the possibilities and practices that exist within the present.
Interdisciplinary in focus, our conference invites participants from
both the humanities and social sciences working with texts and practices
across historical periods and cultural contexts, from a diversity of
disciplines and subfields including literature, film and media studies,
architecture, geography, urban studies, gender studies, and
anthropology. Participants interested in exploring intersections with
gender, race, indigeneity; migration and the circulation of things,
cultural texts, ideas, people, information; climate, ecology, and the
nonhuman; and Asian urban practices and poetics are especially welcome.
We are looking for papers that address the following questions:
* How might literary works, film, architecture, and other poetic
practices mediate, negotiate, or interrogate urban relations and the
built environment?
* How can creative and critical practices reveal, mediate, or
challenge various forms of inequalities and respond to questions
surrounding gender, race, religion, class, labour, and humans’
relationship with animals and nature?
* How can microhistories of cities, municipalities, districts, and
neighborhoods offer a more nuanced view of specific milieux or
challenge grand narratives of development and globalisation?
* In what ways do cities narrate themselves? What stories can be read
in the topography, design, and composition of their built environments?
* How do imagination and memory shape and mediate the urban
experience, or re-create the materiality of the cityscape?
* How have colonialism’s cultural and historical legacies shaped the
urban form and the environmental conditions of cities?
* How might “archipelagic thinking” reconfigure how we imagine urban
regions characterised by city clusters or interconnected
metropolitan centres?
* How do imaginaries of failed or fragile infrastructures reveal
fissures in a world system built on the uninterrupted flow of
capital, bodies, and goods?
* How might an expanded understanding of infrastructure – not simply
as a physical system of connectivity and flow but as the affective,
aesthetic, and material relations that bind together social life –
enable new conceptualisations of the urban?
* How might feminist and queer literatures, films, and artistic works
challenge the masculinist and heteronormative assumptions inherent
in dominant frameworks of migration, economic development, and the
urban?
* How might we rethink our participation in the technological
assemblages that comprise urban life and that mediate our access to
the city, to other inhabitants, and to places elsewhere?
*Kindly send a proposal with a 400-500-word abstract and a one-page CV
to (urbanmediations24 /at/ gmail.com) by the extended deadline of 27 May 2024.
*As the goal is to produce an edited volume, accepted papers are
expected to represent new, unpublished work.
The final session on day 2 will involve 3 parallel workshops to be led
by discussants on emergent topics about urban mediations open to early
career scholars.
An optional walking tour of sites in Hong Kong will be organized on 7
December. Please check the conference website
(_https://urbannarrativesnetwork.com/urban-mediations-2024/_) for
updates on the workshops and the walking tour.
*Confirmed speakers*
**
*Lieven Ameel (Tampere University) *
*Nishat Awan (University College London) *
*Peter Dickinson (Simon Fraser University) *
*Jasmine Nadua Trice (University of California, Los Angeles) *
*Jini Kim Watson (New York University)*
This conference is co-organized by City University of Hong Kong,
Department of English; The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK),
Research Institute for the Humanities, Centre for Cultural Studies & MA
in Intercultural Studies Programme, Departments of English and Cultural
and Religious Studies; University of Hong Kong, Center for the Study of
Globalization and Cultures in the Department of Comparative Literature.
Conference convenors
Elmo Gonzaga (CUHK)
Klaudia Lee (CityU)
Joanna Mansbridge (CUHK)
Alvin K. Wong (HKU)
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]