Deadline for abstract submission: Monday 17th December 2018
Abstracts are invited for chapters in an anthology exploring the roles of
archival practices and archives in the production of time and temporal
relations in the 21st Century. Arkive City 2.0: Tracing Time in the Network
Ages is planned for release in mid 2020. It will feature 18 chapters and 3
visual essays organised into sections on “Technology”, “Culture”, and “Time".
Concept
Technologies of speed, extraction and compression characterise ‘the Network
Ages’, enabling people, (life)forms, materials, ideas and information to be
created, circulated, consumed, wasted, stored and lost in new ways and at new
rates. In response to the multiple and emerging temporalities of network
reality, Arkive City 2.0 is distinct in moving forward to explore the 21st
Century roles of archives as producers, mediators, preservers and erasers of
time. The proposal of an arkive (sic) 'City 2.0' creates a conceptual vehicle
through which to explore the relevance of the polis and the citizen, and
beyond this the nature of agency, in the archival field of contemporary life.
The anthology will bring together a diverse and international body of thinking
on the impact and the potential of changes in archival practices for the
construction of memories, histories, and experiences of the present.
Crucially, the publication will consider how the human production of time
through archives and archiving is now intimately linked to the shaping of
collective futures for the human species and the more-than-human world.
Scope
The publication will consider proposals from the breadth of
(inter)disciplinary areas relevant to the current field of time studies,
including: philosophy, (bio)politics, social sciences, (art)history and
contemporary art/curating, cultural and media theory, geography, physical
sciences, and ecology. The anthology is targeted at scholars, researchers,
artists and creative/practitioners, as well as an informed and curious general
readership.
Themes of particular interest
These include, but are not limited to, archives/archiving in relation to: deep
time; ecology; new materialisms; (post)conflict contexts (Africa, Balkans,
Middle East, Latin & South America); national, pan-national and post-national
contexts; social class; cultures of the commons and hacking; big data; quantum
science and computing.
Submission details
*Please email an abstract (300-400 words, Word or Pdf) to the editor, Dr.
Julie Louise Bacon, [log in to unmask], using the subject heading ‘Arkive
City 2.0 Proposal’. The abstract should outline your topic, argument, key
research questions and scholarly references, and include your name, current
affiliation (where relevant), and contact details.
*Indicate the section of the anthology that you consider most relevant to your
proposal: “Technology”, “Culture”, or “Time".
*Attach a short biography (200 words) and CV (2-3 pages, Word or Pdf) that
includes any relevant weblinks.
Potential contributors are welcome to get in touch with queries about possible
topics prior to abstract submission.
Timeline
Deadline for abstract submission: Monday 17th December 2018
Notification of acceptance: Monday 14th January 2019
Full chapter draft (around 6000 words) deadline: 21st July 2019
Contact Info:
Dr. Julie Louise Bacon, publication editor.
UNSW Art & Design, Sydney, Australia
http://niea.unsw.edu.au/people/dr-julie-louise-bacon
Contact Email: [log in to unmask]
CFP URL: https://julielouisebacon.com/home/news/
====
Paul Brown
http://www.paul-brown.com == http://www.brown-and-son.com
UK Mobile +44 (0)794 104 8228
Skype paul-g-brown
====
Honorary Visiting Professor - Sussex University
http://www.cogs.susx.ac.uk/ccnr/research/creativity.html
====
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