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Subject:

cfp: Theory, Art and Practice of Movement Capture, Analysis and Preservation

From:

Paul Brown <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Computer Arts Society <[log in to unmask]>, Paul Brown <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Tue, 9 Aug 2011 21:41:53 +1000

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (103 lines)

Dear colleagues:

Please find below a call for book chapter proposals relating to the Theory, Art and Practice of Movement Capture, Analysis and Preservation.  Apologies for any cross-posting, but please consider circulating widely. 

Thanks and kind regards,

Tyler Denmead



Call for chapter proposals

This is a call to submit a 500-word chapter proposal of original, non-published material for a book that examines the theory, practice, and art of movement capture, analysis and preservation, edited by Grethe Mitchell.  Selected authors will be invited to submit 4000 to 6000 word chapters for the book and will have an opportunity to present their work at the accompanying symposium in the UK (19-21 January 2012, venue TBC). 

This project is supported by the AHRC’s Beyond Text programme, which has funded 40 projects to tackle key questions of how we communicate across time and place, using performance, sound, images, and objects.

Since Muybridge laid trip wires to aid the photography of a horse in motion in 1878, scholars in the arts and humanities, as well as practitioners in the creative, performing and entertainment industries, have been increasingly drawn to capturing, recording, analysing and preserving movement. In these disciplines and sectors, numerous technologies including non-digital notation, cinematography and markerless motion tracking have come to be used for these purposes.

In this era of technological convergence, sharing knowledge and developing new practices across traditional disciplinary boundaries, in so-called real and virtual environments, and in the liminal spaces in between, have become possible and even necessary.  Therefore the time is right for an interdisciplinary investigation of issues and practices in movement capture, recording and preservation. 

Chapter proposals are welcomed from academics, archivists, curators and scholars working in a broad range of disciplines; practitioners in art and design, music and performing arts as well as those working in the creative, entertainment and other relevant industries.  We also welcome proposals from R&D teams in the commercial sector.  These proposals will address the theoretical, practical and ethical concerns of capturing, analysing and preserving or archiving movement.  In addition, case studies that examine affordable and hybrid use of technologies will also be of interest.  

If there are good reasons for chapters longer or shorter than 4000 to 6000 words, selected authors can address a request to the editor before 04 December 2011.

Suggested topics include, but are not limited to, the following:
What is meant by movement?
How is movement captured and analysed? By what methods? 
How do these methods illustrate how movement is perceived and represented?
What are the salient elements in movement capture, analysis and preservation?
How, or is, the ephemeral nature of movement ever captured?  And, what does it say about those who want to capture it?
When is movement worth preserving and analysing? Why?	
How does movement capture balance complexity and ease-of-use, ensure fidelity and completeness, and/or become versatile in its representation?
What are the ethics of capturing and preserving movement?  
What possibilities for movement are unleashed or hindered by its capture, analysis, and representation?
How are technologies integrated with the body and with body movement?
What is the relationship of time and space to movement capture/recording, analysis and preservation?
What are the aesthetic, social, cultural and/or political concerns of movement capture and preservation?
How does location and duration affect movement capture, analysis and/or preservation?

The intended audience for this book and symposium includes faculty, students, practitioners and policy-makers across a broad range of disciplines in the arts and humanities, as well as from the creative, entertainment and other industries. Chapter proposals should therefore minimise specialised language where possible.

This project has relatively short turnaround times for review and submission.  The deadline for chapter proposal submissions is 0900 (GMT/UT), Monday 26th September 2011.  Please also see below for other important dates and deadlines.  

Proposals should be submitted in Rich Text Format (RTF) and emailed as attachments to [log in to unmask]  Please also attach a brief biography stating professional and research interests and affiliations.  A brief list of publications or relevant activities can also be included.


Important Dates:

0900 GMT/UT on 26th September 2011 	Deadline for submission of proposals.

31st October 2011 					Proposals selected and authors informed.

0900 GMT/UT on 04th  January 2012 		Deadline for completed version of paper. 

19th -21st January 2012 					Opportunity for selected authors to present papers based on their book chapter at the symposium on “The Art, Theory and Practice of Movement Capture, Analysis and Preservation”.

27th January 2012					Papers reviewed and returned to authors.

0900 GMT/UT on 13th February 2012		Camera ready papers submitted to editor. 


For queries, please contact either one of us:

Grethe Mitchell (Principal Investigator & Editor) [log in to unmask]

Tyler Denmead (Research Assistant) [log in to unmask]

To receive updates about the project and symposium please sign up to our mailing list by going to: www.jiscmail.ac.uk/mcap and pressing ‘subscribe’.
Alternatively email Tyler Denmead at  [log in to unmask] with your request to subscribe and he will add you to the list.

For more information on this project please go to: http://projects.beyondtext.ac.uk/playground-games-fo1/index.php

For more information on the Beyond Text Programme go to:
http://www.beyondtext.ac.uk



************************
Tyler Denmead
Email: [log in to unmask]

Research Assistant Principal Investigator (AHRC "The Theory, Practice & Art of Movement Capture and Preservation")

To receive updates about the project and symposium please sign up to our mailing list by going to: www.jiscmail.ac.uk/mcap and pressing ‘subscribe’.  Alternatively, email Tyler Denmead at [log in to unmask] with your request. 

For more information on this project please go to: http://projects.beyondtext.ac.uk/playground-games-fo1/index.php

For more information on the Beyond Text Programme go to:
http://www.beyondtext.ac.uk


====
Paul Brown - based in OZ February to August 2011
mailto:[log in to unmask] == http://www.paul-brown.com
OZ Landline +61 (0)7 3391 0094 == USA fax +1 309 216 9900
OZ Mobile +61 (0)419 72 74 85 == Skype paul-g-brown
====
Synapse Artist-in-Residence - Deakin University
http://www.deakin.edu.au/itri/cisr/projects/hear.php
Honorary Visiting Professor - Sussex University
http://www.cogs.susx.ac.uk/ccnr/research/creativity.html
====

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