Dear all,
In addition to the fascinating panels circulated as part of the Art,
Materiality and Representation conference hosted by the Royal
Anthropological Institute (RAI) at The British Museum and SOAS 1st-3rd June
2018, we are pleased to remind you of the approaching deadline to invite
papers for the following panel (Code P026) titled Participation and
Guardianship: On the Ownership of Images in Movement. This panel will
consider issues of informal and participatory heritage transmission in
South Asia, operating in relation to dominant or absent heritage regimes.
Please provide a 250 word abstract proposal by* 8th January 2018* to the
following online form: http://nomadit.co.uk/rai/events/rai2018/
conferencesuite.php/panels/6076 .
Papers should be around 15-20 minutes in length. The inclusion of
multimedia, film, audio, or other elements as part of the presentation
would be most welcomed.
Please see below for a detailed abstract:
-----
Panel 26: Participation and Guardianship: On the Ownership of Images in
Movement
Convened by Timothy P.A. Cooper (University College London) and Vindhya
Buthpitiya (University College London).
This panel will consider issues of informal and participatory heritage
transmission in South Asia, operating in relation to dominant or absent
heritage regimes. For example, in Pakistan, a lack of heritage
infrastructure and industrial support has forced market-based film
retailers to pull master copies and memorabilia materials from obscurity
via neighbourhood waste collectors, indifferent heirs, or from closed and
destroyed cinemas. In post-war Sri Lanka, the state's triumphalist
discourse has been met with the mobilisation of photographs of the war dead
and missing as objects of civilian resistance and collective memory,
forming a participatory counter-narrative.
These examples signal the existence of forms of mobile and temporary
guardianship. Such acts are conducive to mourning and memorialisation, and
as contingent on participation as on authority, access, and ownership.
Platforms for sharing, saving, and disseminating significant images are
notably porous; they are characterised by an exorbitance that preserves far
more than they intend to. Museum institutions and archives, on the other
hand, permit the movement of heritage objects only so long as it takes
place within a wider infrastructure for its dissemination. Such acts of
dispersion are designed to be economically and socially productive,
politically expedient, as well as generative of a heritage as a category of
political economy. Thereby, the panel will explore examples of mobile and
temporary guardianship, spread across sites and carriers, marked by
reproduction and dispersal beyond the actual or symbolic boundaries of
heritage regimes.
Thanks
Tim
*************************************************************
* Anthropology-Matters Mailing List
* http://www.anthropologymatters.com *
* A postgraduate project comprising online journal, *
* online discussions, teaching and research resources *
* and international contacts directory. *
* To join this list or to look at the archived previous *
* messages visit: *
* http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/lists/Anthropology-Matters.HTML *
* If you have ALREADY subscribed: to send a message to all *
* those currently subscribed to the list,just send mail to: *
* [log in to unmask] *
* *
* Enjoyed the mailing list? Why not join the new *
* CONTACTS SECTION @ www.anthropologymatters.com *
* an international directory of anthropology researchers
*
* To unsubscribe: please log on to jiscmail.ac.uk, and *
* go to the 'Subscriber's corner' page. *
*
***************************************************************
|