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Dear all,

We are looking for participants for a workshop on *The post-socialist
street: rising car mobility in comparative perspective* taking place from 6
to 8 October 2016 in Regensburg, Germany. Please see the call below and if
you are interested in attending, please send us a paper abstract of no more
than 250 words and a short bio by 24 March. The workshop is planned as
relatively small (with no more than 20 participants) to allow enough time
for each participant to present a paper and to discuss it. We aim to make
our selection by the beginning of April. We can also cover travel and
accommodation for selected participants. If you have any questions, please
do not hesitate to ask.

With kind regards,

Tauri


*Call for papers for a three-day workshop taking place in Regensburg
(Germany), Thursday 6 to Saturday 8 October 2016*
*The post-socialist street: rising car mobility in comparative perspective*

*International workshop organized by Prof. Dr. Ger Duijzings (Graduate
School for East and Southeast European Studies, University of Regensburg)
and Dr. Tauri Tuvikene (Centre for Landscape and Culture, Tallinn
University; visiting researcher at Leibniz Institute for Regional
Geography).*

Life on city streets has always enjoyed great interest amongst scholars,
philosophers, and artists. Rightly so, as the urban street triggers
unexpected and unpredictable encounters: the urban social fabric is, as it
were, woven by people moving around, accompanied by others or transporting
stuff from A to B, on foot, using animal power or public transport, or
vehicles such as bicycles, cars, trucks, and buses. Yet, where these
various forms and modes of mobility meet, there is inevitably ‘friction’,
resulting from differences in speed, weight, maneuverability and symbolic
value of the vehicles used (see for example Henderson 2013; Katz 1999;
Truitt 2008). Hence the street does not only facilitate movement (Blomley
2011), it is also a site of multiple colliding mobilities that need to be
negotiated and regulated. Despite the global spread of street signs,
traffic regulations, and engineered devices, traffic often ‘looks’ and
‘feels’ very different in cities around the world (Edensor, 2004; Miller,
2001). These differences are due to the variety of conditions: the cultural
environment and the geographic terrain or climate, the quality of roads and
the composition and density of the built environment, the vehicles used and
the regulations imposed by authorities, the urban demography in terms of
ethnicity and class, and the social and cultural perceptions towards
various modes of mobility.

For this workshop we propose to reflect on traffic interaction and street
life in post-socialist central and eastern Europe, as ‘friction’ has been
particularly intense here due to the sudden and explosive rise of car
ownership and car mobility after 1989. Here, but also in other (still)
socialist countries such as China, political changes have led to radical
transformations in the way people move around, as former ‘socialist’ modes
of mobility such as public transport and bicycles have been marginalized
and replaced by a culture of privately owned cars. The sudden rise in car
mobility in these (former) socialist countries is still an underexplored
topic, especially when it comes to understanding the social and cultural
aspects of these transformations in the everyday life of post-socialist
cities (Burrell and Hörschelmann, 2014; Siegelbaum, 2011). This workshop
therefore seeks to advance our empirical and conceptual understanding of
the post-socialist street.

The discussion is framed around two related phenomena: how the
post-socialist street is the site of an unrivalled growth in car mobility
but is also becoming the venue of renewed political engagements, where
claims to shared public spaces and visions for urban futures are again
articulated and contested against the background of the recent socialist
past. Seen the large Critical Mass cycle protests in Budapest, Bucharest
and other east European cities, the demand for alternative and more
sustainable forms of mobility is on the rise,  as it has been for some time
already in traditional car dominated countries such as the USA, Germany,
and Japan. The analysis and comparison of these transformations,
interactions, intersections, and political engagements with regard to (car)
mobility in post-socialist contexts, is what this workshop tries to
achieve.

Three keynote speakers with strong expertise in the rise of car mobility in
the ‘traditional’ car (and car producing) countries USA, Germany, and Japan
will offer the historical and comparative framework needed: these countries
had their own specific trajectories in terms of introducing, accommodating
and domesticating cars in society and in public spaces. Keynote speakers
are

   - *Kurt Möser* (Karsruhe Institute of Technology) discussing Germany,
   - *Peter Norton* (University of Virginia) the US and
   - *Joshua H. Roth* (Mount Holyoke College, US) Japan.

Following the keynote lectures we will extend the discussion around these
specific historical cases to the post-socialist context.

The workshop seeks to address the following issues but is not limited to
these: interaction in public spaces and on streets and conflicts between
road users; the negotiation and regulation of differential speeds and
flows; official and informal approaches to mobility and immobility, mooring
and fixity; cultural perceptions of ‘order’ and ‘chaos’ in traffic; social
identity and inequality in traffic; socialist and national
path-dependencies of current traffic conditions; political and media
discourses and their role in changing the parameters of public space and
traffic interaction; the promotion and regulation of car ownership and
mobility through legal provisions and forms of law enforcement; etc.

The workshop is open to scholars at all stages of career and we would
encourage junior researchers to apply. We still have some places available
in the workshop. If you are interested in participating, please send
us an *abstract
of 250 words* outlining your proposed paper and a *short biography of
maximum 150 words*. Please send it to both Ger Duijzings (
[log in to unmask]) and Tauri Tuvikene ([log in to unmask]) and also
include your contact details and affiliation. The deadline for abstract
submission is *Thursday, 24 March 2016*. We are happy to cover economy
travel and accommodation costs for the selected workshop participants.


References

Blomley, N. (2011) Rights of Passage: Sidewalks and the Regulation of
Public Flow (Abingdon: Routledge).

Burrell, K. & Hörschelmann, K. (Eds.) (2014) Mobilities in Socialist and
Post-Socialist States: Societies on the Move (Basingstoke: Palgrave
Macmillan).

Edensor, T. (2004) Automobility and National Identity. Representation,
Geography and Driving Practice. Theory, Culture & Society, 21(4–5), 101–120.

Henderson, J. (2013) Street Fight: The Politics of Mobility in San
Francisco. University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst.

Katz, J. (1999) How Emotions Work (Chicago and London: The University of
Chicago Press).

Miller, D. (Ed.) (2001) Car Cultures (Oxford, New York: Berg).

Siegelbaum, L. H. (Ed.) (2011) The Socialist Car: Automobility in the
Eastern Bloc (Ithaca & London: Cornell University Press).

Truitt, A. (2008) On the back of a motorbike: Middle-class mobility in Ho
Chi Minh City, Vietnam. American Ethnologist, 35(1), 3–19.

-- 
Tauri Tuvikene, PhD
Tallinna Ülikool, teadur / Tallinn University, Researcher
Leibniz Institute for Regional Geography, Visiting Researcher
taurituvikene.wordpress.com