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[Commlist] CFP Electricdreams III - Conflicts and Margins: Imagining Otherness ... through Speculative Fiction
Thu Jun 13 16:33:24 GMT 2024
CFP Electricdreams - Between fiction and society III
"Conflicts and Margins: Imagining Otherness, Ecocatastrophes, Perpetual
War, Technological Imbalance, and Systemic Injustice through Speculative
Fiction"
Call for papers for an international in-person three-day conference on
speculative fiction, science fiction and fantasy fiction to be held in
Milan, Italy, October 9-10-11, 2024. The conference is organized and
hosted by IULM University of Milan, in collaboration with Complutense
University of Madrid and the HISTOPIA research group.
Fields of interest: literature, cinema, TV series, comics,
games/videogames, new media, performative arts, cultural studies.
The international conference Electricdreams - Between Fiction and
Society III invites a discussion on how speculative fiction, science
fiction, and fantasy fiction focus on the tropes of conflict and
marginality across different media. According to von Clausewitz “war is
(...) an act of force to compel our enemy to do our will.” The idea of
conflict is not just inherently military, it can also be broadened to
personal and societal relations of power, including forms of opposition
and domination between different entities and groups. Conflicts lead to
marginalization, bias, control, ecocatastrophes, technological
imbalance, and systemic injustice. At the same time, conflicts also
originate during processes of resistance and transformation: margins can
be the liminal space where individuals emerge or distance themselves
from the system and regain some degree of freedom and agency.
“The category of the Other is as primordial as consciousness itself”, de
Beauvoir wrote in The Second Sex because “the self” needs to “categorize
and classify” interactions and subjects to build its identity. And, as
Bauman affirmed, “to classify means to set apart, to segregate. It means
first to postulate that the world consists of discrete and distinctive
entities; then to postulate that each entity has a group of similar or
adjacent entities with which it belongs, and with which – together – it
is opposed to some other entities; and then to make the postulated real
by linking differential patterns of action to different classes of
entities”. Biopolitical power relations model social and private bodies
not only through homologation but also through opposition. According to
Foucault, individuals can be considered a “useful force” when they
provide a body that is, at the same time, productive and subjugated and
that fits homogeneously into the social, economic, ethical, sexual, and
political standards of society, despite the persistent presence of
internal hierarchies.
Non-aligned, rebellious, and marginalized bodies become a danger, an
element of trauma, a justification for spatial, linguistic, and
psychophysical control and repression. Fear, hate, prejudices, and
stereotypes fuel a dystopian and debasing treatment of “others”: the
monstrous transformation of otherness in the collective imagination
leads to unbearable conflicts and to the dehumanization of the subjects
that colonial, racial, patriarchal, environmental, and capitalist
policies negatively depict as discordant, different, marginalized.
Countless and dramatic pages of human history remind us of this
tendency: Colonialism and Imperialism, wartime genocides, slavery,
Apartheid, systemic racism, anti-immigration policies, women and
LGBTQIA+ limitation of civil rights (including reproductive rights), an
aggressive use of and a predatory relationship with technologies,
ecocatastrophes and apocalyptic conflicts for survival in depleted
natural environments. As Magneto says in the recent animated series
X-Men ’97: “In history’s sad song, there is a refrain. Believe
differently, love differently, be of different sex or skin, and be
punished. We sing this song to one another.”
Utopian promises of peace, justice, and progress have influenced
speculative fiction, but the 21st century has continued to witness
complex and dramatic series of traumatic events affecting both our
collective imagination and the fictionalization of a perpetual-conflict
state where the marginalization of the Other is the ground for a clash
involving multiple factions and entities. When society is infected,
culture often recognizes, exacerbates, and denounces the infection,
promoting empathy, knowledge, and consciousness, and helping to shed
light on “illnesses”.
Literature, film, TV series, comics, video games, new narrative media,
performative arts, and popular culture have often given voice to the
voiceless, the underdogs, minorities. Conflicts and margins stand at the
core of literary speculative fiction, i.e. the galactic wars between
powerful houses in Frank Herbert’s Dune Chronicles, with the
marginalized people of the planet Arrakis acting as balance. But the
link between conflicts and margins is a trope also present in many other
media: CRPGs like Baldur’s Gate 3, where the conflict between Mind
Flayers and Githyankis across the worlds is at the center of the
marginalization of the main characters, with their parasitic tadpole
trying to mutate them into their enemies; films like Ex-Machina, where
the exploiting relations between human and posthuman, as well as between
men and women, are explored; YA speculative fictions like The Hunger
Games and Divergent, where the conflict is between districts and
factions with their orders and marginalized groups; dystopian novels
like Agustina Baxterrica’s Cadáver Exquisito (Tender is the Flesh),
where hegemonic capitalism and systemic injustice lead to intensive
(poor) human livestock farming; comics like X-Men, where the violence
against otherness and the repercussions of discriminatory actions on
society is depicted through the mutant metaphor; films like Gattaca or
video-games like Orwell where the conflict is visualized as an elusive
technique in which hegemony forces could employ technology to draw a
border among the recognised and the excluded. In choreographies such as
The Trilogy (The Millennarium, Aeon, and Sulphur) or in performances
such as Una Isla, humans and machines endeavor to establish a dialogue
and a point of convergence on stage, which transforms into a dystopian
landscape. Avatars, robots, and humans challenge each other, vying to
assert their supremacy in a dynamic display of capabilities and values.
This interplay often causes a glitch, disrupting the seamless
integration of their interactions and highlighting the underlying
tensions between technology and humanity. The 4.0 human experiences a
profound conflict with the biological limits of their body, striving to
overcome these organic restrictions through technological and scientific
advancements, as argued by Donna Haraway and Rosi Braidotti. This clash
reflects the tension between the physical reality of the human body and
the aspirations towards a post-human condition, as described by N.
Katherine Hayles, which is also mirrored in contemporary performing arts.
How have we imagined the reasons and the agents behind conflicts, what
is the role of the margins and marginalized categories in the conflicts,
what are the scenarios for a possible resolution of conflicts? We hope
that the analysis of speculative fiction could help us promote peace,
inclusion, redistribution of power, intersectional empowerment, empathy,
and hope, helping in visualizing a different society and an empowered
mode of interaction with the Otherness.
Proposals may cover the following themes, although they are not limited
to them:
- The conflicts between socio-political and technological entities
and/or individual bodies;
- The traumatic embodiments of otherness (gender, LGBTQIA+, queerness,
ethnicity, disability, nationality, religion, ideology);
- The postcolonial and neocolonial critiques of dominant/Western canons;
- The climate in/justice and climate change;
- The conflict between human and post-human agents;
- The encounter with non-human entities and the issue involving
communication and miscommunication;
- The opposition between anthropic and other species or the natural
environment for the survival;
- The utopian/dystopian possibilities of margins, spaces, and geographies;
- The idea of borders as spaces of conflict and the opposition between
clear divisions and the possibility to engage with the Other;
- Imagining worlds, societies, and the life of living beings after the
conflict;
- Possible ways of being at the margins - i.e. the choice of opposing
society, the determination of living outside society, …;
The conference will be held in English and in-person. We will be happy
to consider proposals from researchers and scholars at any level of
career advancement. You may send proposals containing an abstract
(maximum 300 words) for a 20-minute presentation, a brief biographical
note (maximum 100 words), and affiliation and contact information to
(electricdreams.conference /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(electricdreams.conference /at/ gmail.com)> by July 30, 2024. Whole
panel proposals consisting of three/four talks are also welcome: please
include a brief introduction about the theme of the proposed panel,
along with an abstract and a brief biography of each participant.
Important dates
Abstract submission deadline: July 30, 2024
Notification of acceptance: August 23, 2024
Confirmation of participation: by September 3, 2024
The international conference will be held in-person on October 9-10-11,
2024 at IULM University in Milan (Italy), as part of the
"Sognielettrici"/Electricdreams International Film Festival (October
7-12, 2024).
Conference registration: 40 €
Social dinner (optional): 20 €
(Payments will not be refundable)
Scientific committee
Gianni Canova (IULM University)
Manuela Ceretta (University of Turin)
Elisabetta Di Minico (Complutense University of Madrid, UNA4CAREER)
Ester Fuoco (IULM University)
Stefano Locati (IULM University)
Francisco José Martínez Mesa (Complutense University of Madrid, HISTOPIA)
Anna Pasolini (University of Milan)
Juan Pro Ruiz (CSIC - Spanish National Research Council, HISTOPIA)
Federico Selvini (IULM University)
Nicoletta Vallorani (University of Milan)
Contact information: Stefano Locati ((stefano.locati /at/ iulm.it)
<mailto:(stefano.locati /at/ iulm.it)>), Elisabetta Di Minico ((elidimin /at/ ucm.es)
<mailto:(elidimin /at/ ucm.es)>), and Federico Selvini
((federico.selvini /at/ iulm.it) <mailto:(federico.selvini /at/ iulm.it)>).
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