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Dear all,

With the usual apologies for multiple postings.  We would like to send a
reminder on the cfa for Losing Ground: On holes and other absences.
Deadline is March the 20th, 2017.

My kindest regards,

Aya
________________________________________


University of Warwick, Coventry (UK)Friday, 19 May 2017

*“ To dig, to drill , to burrow, to punch, to enlarge, to fill up, to fall
in, to jump over, to look through, to hide in- all of these, and indeed
many others, are things we do with, around, inside, and through holes.”*

*“A hole is there where something isn’t.”*

 Casati and Varzi, *Of Holes and Other Superficialities*

*What happens when ground gives way?*

Sinkholes are constantly appearing. At least; there has been an increase in
media attention over their globally growing number. Sinkholes describe
geologically formed depressions or holes in the ground caused by either
suffusion or karst processes leading to a collapse of the surface. They can
appear naturally, but increasingly seem to be man-made as a result of more
diversified subterranean uses. Their increasing number destabilizes urban,
political and social infrastructure; it also raises profound metaphysical
questions. In this workshop we attempt to look at sinkholes, as a lens
through which we can ponder on situations of a vanishing of the ground
beneath our feet. Holes can be seen as the absence of geographic
materialities, loss, gaps, and collapse of meaning. Holes can also be
interpreted as potential sites of openings, creativity, and reconstruction
of new or recovered meaning.

We invite contributions that engage with the question of holes; a question,
we believe, that can only be thought of through a multidisciplinary lens.
We look for a conversation among artists, philosophers, geographers,
academics in Sociology, Politics, Literature and Theatre and Performance
Studies. The workshop will be held in parallel with an art exhibition at
 Warwick University, Coventry Arts. The exhibition will feature segments of
Heide Fasnacht’s *Suspect Terrain*
<http://socratessculpturepark.org/exhibition/suspectterrain/> and Jenny
Perlin’s* One Hundred Sinkholes*
<http://simonprestongallery.com/?gallery_exhibition=jenny-perlin>, and is
part of a larger effort to make holes relevant as a subject and site of
learning and research.
We invite interested contributors to send a 300 word (or shorter) abstract,
and a brief biographical note to Marijn Nieuwenhuis (
[log in to unmask])and Aya Nassar ([log in to unmask]) by
*March** 20, 2017*. Besides paper presentations;  alternative contributions
such as performance, videos, drawings, pictures (etc.) are *warmly
welcomed. *
**Further information can be found on our blog:
https://sinkholesworkshop.wordpress.com/
<https://sinkholesworkshop.wordpress.com/>*

The workshop and the exhibition are funded by the Institute of Advanced
Study (IAS), and the Department of Politics and International Studies
(PAIS) University of Warwick, and a PTF Professional Development Fund from
The New School,