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Call For Papers interdisciplinary inquiries related to the concept of
accessibility
Please send all submissions to [log in to unmask] by February 28th, 2006

Thresholds # 32 aspires to shed light on an interdisciplinary range of
interpretations and meanings associated with the theme of access.
Restricted access to certain architectural spaces is a phenomenon found
in all cultures at all times, transcending limitations of genre, period,
belief system, and nationality. Does the notion of access have any
impact on the
definition of architecture and more specifically on the theorization of
certain architectural styles? How might an artwork or architectural
space allow or prevent access? As globalization and technology give us
greater "virtual" access, we are becoming arguably more restricted in a
physical sense. Why do we still question what is accessible in our world
of globalization and "virtual" nomadic wandering?

Call for Papers. For the Spring '06 issue of Thresholds, we seek
submissions from graduate students and scholars in a wide range of
fields, including media and visual arts, architecture, and art history.
We are interested in diverse inquiries related to the concept of
accessibility, from purely theoretical and historical analyses to actual
works of art and
architecture.

To whom is access to a given space granted? Is it offered based on
criteria
that are economic, psychological, physical, geographical, political, or
conferred according to national affinity, identity,
religious orientation, ethnic background, and so on? Many minority
communities in different societies have been denied
access to places outside of their neighborhoods, whether these
neighborhoods are actual ghettos or not. How do such
physical restrictions interact with the related concepts of history,
memory, nostalgia, nationality, politics, and power?
Similar restrictions extend also into the academic realm. Art and
architectural history relies partially on archival evidence.

How do we evaluate the historiography of art and architecture with
regard to the accessibility of archives? In Archive
Fever: A Freudian Impression (1995), Derrida reminds us how, through
turning Freud's house in Vienna into a museum,
the secretive became public. How does the accessibility of such sources
affect our perceptions of the past? Moreover,
there is a distinction between actual archives (official places for the
retention of records, with systems of storage,
organization, cataloging) and those that are often accessed through
memory. How can a historian access memory, in a
collective sense?

Historically, it has been possible to gain access to a restricted place
through masquerade and transvestite disguise.
Mikhail Bakhtin describes how in the medieval carnival there was a
leveling of performer and spectator, a reversal of
hierarchy, where boundaries were eliminated and the distances between
people were suspended. Throughout the
centuries, homosocial spaces gained ground in many Islamic societies due
to the inaccessibility of the harem to outside
men, and to the forbidden nature of public spaces to most women. Indeed,
these processes are strategic rather than
incidental. What particular role do politicians, architects, or even the
police play in allowing or preventing access?
Submissions may address the above issues, but need not be limited to
them.
Please send all submissions to [log in to unmask] by February 28th, 2006.

Or send your file on a CD or a disk to the following address:
Thresholds
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Department of Architecture
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02139

For questions contact: 
Pamela Karimi at [log in to unmask] or fax any queries to 617.258.9455. 
For all email requests about this issue, please include Thresholds 32 in
your email subject line.


Guidelines for submission:
Thresholds invites submissions, including but not limited to scholarly
works, from all fields. Thresholds prints only original material.
Manuscripts for review should be no more than 2,500
words. Text must be formatted in accordance with The Chicago Manual of
Style. Spelling should follow American
convention and quotations must be translated into English. All materials
(including texts and images) must be submitted
electronically-via email or on a CD or a disk. Text should be saved as
Microsoft Word format. Accompanying images
should be sent as Tiff files with a resolution of at least 300 dpi at 8"
x 9" print size. Figures should be numbered clearly in  the text. Image
captions and credits must be included with submissions. It is the
author's responsibility to secure
permissions for image reproduction and pay any necessary fees. A brief
bio of the author(s) must accompany the text.


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