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Call for Papers, AAG 2016:

Art, Activism and the City: Global Perspectives

Session Organizers: Jason Luger, King’s College London and National
University of Singapore; Julie Ren, City University of Hong Kong and
Humboldt University Berlin; and Nathan Bullock, Duke University

In Hong Kong, the pro-democracy Umbrella Movement inspired art
installations and performative works throughout the city; in Thailand, ‘red
shirts’ take on a political meaning; meanwhile, a ‘woman in red’ in Taksim
Square became a poignant symbol of the demonstrations in Istanbul. Global
activist movements are different, yet often united by iconography based on
colours, motifs, and artistic symbols: sometimes artists and the arts play
a deliberate and central role; other times, a more peripheral one.

Scholars are exploring the geographies of artistic forms of activism in the
city with renewed vigour, responding to social, cultural and political
movements around the world. ‘Creative resistance’ (Colomb and  Novy, 2012),
‘artivism’ (Krischer, 2012) and ‘cultural activism’’ (Buser, et al., 2013)
are sometimes used interchangeably to describe the ways that art, activism
and urban space intersect.

However, the diverse terrains and contexts of art, activism and the city
require more explorations from around the world in order to encapsulate a
wider breadth of experiences. Through investigations of the complexities,
hybridities and contradictions in the ways that art, society, activism and
urban space are produced, encountered and formed, this session seeks to
address crucial questions such as,


   -

   How do artists situate themselves within broader activist movements - as
   either deliberate participants or non-participants in activist causes?



   -

   In what ways must “critical art” be expanded to include new and varying
   forms of architecture, performance and new media/mediums to reflect the
   changing politics of representation and identity in urban space?



   -

   What are the main themes and issues emerging around the world that unite
   (or divide) art-led activism? In what ways are issues such as human rights,
   civil liberties, environmental justice or economic inequality portrayed
   across different contexts? How does this affect understandings about
   criticality in artistic practice?



   -

   What does artistic activism ‘look’ like, in terms of how it is performed
   and enacted materially and digitally, across space and place? What new and
   hybrid forms are emerging that challenge existing theories on trajectories
   of contemporary art or the role of art in the city?



   -

   How does the state, as an unstable and highly fluid category, interact
   with artistic activism, and in what ways is such activism both complicit
   and subversive within / against state aims and agendas?  How do these forms
   of artistic activism respond to varying degrees of authoritarianism or
   democratization? E.g., how does critical art - and its relation to the
   authoritarian state - differ from Singapore to Turkey; from Russia to
   Egypt?



   -

   How can comparative approaches inform our understanding about patterns
   and trajectories across presumed categories and geographies of “global
   north” and “global south,” across scale and history?


We invite papers that focus on the above, or related questions, and
researchers dealing with a broad spectrum of themes and topics relating to
activism, art, urban space, and governance. Particularly welcome are papers
based on empirical material from understudied sites (atypical cases, small
cities, authoritarian cities, etc.) as well as papers with novel analytical
or methodological approaches.

We also welcome papers, perspectives and provocations from working artists
and activists, to add depth and texture to theoretical questions and define
art broadly to include architecture and performance.

Submission Process: Please send an abstract of 250-300 words to:
[log in to unmask], [log in to unmask] and [log in to unmask] by
Friday, October 16th with the subject line “AAG 2016 Art Activism.” We will
let accepted participants know by Tuesday, October 20th, in advance of the
AAG Registration Deadline of October 29th (Thursday).