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Dear all,

please take a look at the following call for papers. Some of you may be in
interested.
Yours truly,
JF

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Jean-Francois Gauvin
Ph.D. candidate
Department of the History of Science
Harvard University
1 Oxford Street
Science Center 371
Cambridge, MA 02138

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Con/texts of Invention
A working conference of the Society for Critical Exchange

With support from the Center for Law, Technology, and the Arts at Case Western
Reserve University School of Law; the History of Science Department at Harvard
University; the Washington College of Law at American University; and the
Committee on Conceptual and Historical Studies of Science at the University of
Chicago

Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio
April 20-22, 2006

This conference interrogates the social and cultural construction of invention 
the diverse ways in which invention has been conceptualized in the arts and
sciences in the broadest sense, including literature, the fine arts,
entertainment, the physical and life sciences, law, economics, medicine,
engineering, agriculture, education, communications, computation, finance, and
business. Emphasis will be on the institutional cultures, rhetorics, and
histories of invention across these fields. In this way the Society seeks to
extend and deepen the inquiry of its long-standing project on “Intellectual
Property and the Construction of Authorship
(see www.cwru.edu/affil/sce/IPCA_main.html).
Papers reflecting upon the impact of
the "critique of authorship" will thus be especially welcome. The
conference will include lectures and panel discussions; to facilitate
discussion, papers
selected for panels will circulate in advance of the conference.

Topics may include (but are not limited to):

*the author as inventor* the inventor as author* imitation and
originality* psychologies of creativity* pathologies such as writer (or
inventors) *genius *hack(ing)* tradition and the individual talent,
including the anxiety of influence* forgery* crimes such as plagiarism and
piracy* the inventor as hero* invention vs. discovery* simultaneous
discovery* joint/collective invention* useful and useless knowledge* the
idea/expression distinction* invention vs. innovation* material and
social inputs to invention*  invention policy* narratives of invention*
depictions of invention, including patent drawings* invisible invention*
inventing organisms* invention in rhetorical theory* genre and
invention* invention and memory* invention in popular and children
literature* pedagogies of invention*  invention and self-help, including
creativity workshops and invention promotion services* cross-cultural
perspectives on invention* invention and power* imperialism and
invention* universities and invention*
rhetorics of entrepreneurship* representations of collaboration*
corporate authorship/invention* economies of invention* legal incentives
and disincentives* private and public domains* discourses of
intellectual commons, including free software and open source* collage
and sampling* geographies of invention* ethnography of invention* gender
and invention

Please send paper abstracts (no full papers please), a CV of no more than three
pages, and any suggestions for panel topics by October 5 to: [log in to unmask]

Conference Organizers:
Olufunmilayo Arewa, Law, Case Western Reserve University
Mario Biagioli, History of Science, Harvard University
Peter Jaszi, Law, American University
Adrian Johns, History of Science, University of Chicago
Martha Woodmansee, English and Law, Case Western Reserve University