begum ozden firat on Mon, 20 Aug 2007 18:04:36 +0200 (CEST)
|
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
[Nettime-nl] Theorizing Cultural Activism: Practices, Dilemmas and Potentialities
|
Call for Contributions: Theorizing Cultural Activism: Practices,
Dilemmas and Potentialities
Thamyris/Intersecting: Place, Sex, Race invites articles
for an upcoming volume in its series, titled Theorizing Cultural
Activism: Practices, Dilemmas and Potentialities, which will focus
on contemporary cultural activism that deals with issues of gender,
race, queer, inter-cultural dialogue, political agency and societal
transformation within the broader framework of contemporary anti-
capitalist, anti-consumerist and alternative-globalization struggles
with their particular forms, existing practices, and their further
implications and potentialities.
The Yes Men, the Guerilla Girls, Adbusters, Reclaim the Streets,
Critical Art Ensemble, Genderpranks, the Rebel Clown Army, Reverend
Billy, Bansky, the Space Hijackers, Yomango, ®TMark, Biotic Baking
Brigade and Billboard Liberation Front are now as famous and
inspiring as T. W. Adorno, Guy Debord, or Jean Baudrillard. The
actions and campaigns of such groups have brought about alternative
modes in which political activism can be innovative and destructive.
Simultaneously they proved to be inspiring forms of political art
that moves beyond its institutional boundaries as well as beyond the
dichotomy between autonomous and committed art. These contemporary
practices, all of which are directed towards disturbing and
reorienting the cultural and political sphere by attacking the
narratives of truth in the society in one way or another can be
summed up under the notion of a cultural activism that involves
different tactics, such as culture jamming, sousveillance, media
hoaxing, adbusting, subvertising, flash mobs, street art, hacktivism,
billboard liberation, and urban guerilla, to name but a few. While
theoretical and historical roots of these cultural practices can be
found in the avant-garde art movements of the past —from Dada and
Surrealism to Situationist International— the socio-cultural contexts
in which these actions take place differ greatly from that of the
historical avant-guards and hence deserve to be theorized in their
contemporary specificity.
Therefore, we invite scholars and activists to think
together to provide various responses and establish a productive
dialogue between the theorizations of the intricacies of our times
and activist/subversive practices that deal with them. The encounter
between the insights of political, social and critical theory and
activist visions, suggestions and actions is both urgent and
appealing. We aim to explore this confrontational collaboration, its
limits and productiveness, both in theory and in practice.
An important concern is to contextualize practices both
in their specificity and in a broader framework, by considering their
predecessors, their temporal and theoretical neighbors, and allied or
hostile relatives. By doing so, the various manifestations of
activist practices in different localities and their transnational
qualities can be elucidated.
Activist practices are situated at the juncture of
power, desire, identity, political practice, political agency and the
dialectic of subversion and recuperation. Contributions should try to
engage with these coordinates so as to generate various suggestions
about the present and future, subjects and politics, as well as the
formation and reformation of images, spaces, meanings and everyday
life. Contributions are expected to be concerned with rethinking and
exploring theoretical concepts and tools through practice, and
comprehend and develop political practice by the help of theories,
both for a better understanding of theory and practice, and more
importantly, for new practical transformatory critical suggestions
for our times.
Please send an abstract of your contribution (300 words maximum) and
a short biographical note by October 15, 2007 to Aylin Kuryel -
aylinkuryel@gmail.com and Begüm Özden Fırat - B.O.Firat@uva.nl. The
deadline for the final articles is February 1, 2008.
______________________________________________________
* Verspreid via nettime-nl. Commercieel gebruik niet
* toegestaan zonder toestemming. <nettime-nl> is een
* open en ongemodereerde mailinglist over net-kritiek.
* Meer info, archief & anderstalige edities:
* http://www.nettime.org/.
* Contact: Menno Grootveld (rabotnik@xs4all.nl).