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Dear all,
here is the text of the CfP for Connessioni Remote
<https://riviste.unimi.it/index.php/connessioniremote> (UniMi) n.3.

*Gradients of liveness. Socio-technical shaping of performing arts between
online and offline*

*Editors: Laura Gemini and Stefano Brilli*



The third issue of *Connessioni Remote* aims to provide a new contribution
to the ongoing debate on the concept of liveness. The objective of this
issue is to understand how the liveness dimension of artistic communication
is transformed and widened in the current digital media eco-system.

The issue focus on performing arts as key agents in the complexification of
liveness, and as a prime field for experimenting the live techno-media
affordances.

The analysis of live communication in mediatized environments draws on a
long and important legacy of analysis, starting with Walter Benjamin,
continuing through authors who have examined the live dimension of mass
media, such as Scannell (1989) and Thompson (1995), and then arriving at
the well-known work of Philip Auslander (1999); Auslander, by posing
liveness as a phenomenological condition rather than as an inherent
property of a medium, has opened up a branch of study that has been
exploring the conditions for the liveness-experience to emerge.

Reflection on liveness also underwent a significant acceleration with the
pandemic crisis, which made the concept even more central, given the forced
absence of “traditionally understood” live occasions.

The mass-media and online broadcasting of artistic, theatrical and musical
events has made it possible to distribute and experience a wide range of
cultural contents, to keep the artistic experimentation alive and to
stimulate a remote relationship with audiences through performances. Most
notably, it has allowed (and still allows) us to observe how liveness
should be understood as a shifting phenomenon, where the sense of
co-presence is re-articulated according to historical, cultural, media and
experiential contexts.

In online contexts, for example, it is possible to observe what Auslander
refers to as "digital liveness", which does not derive solely from the
properties of digital environments or from the audience constructon, but
which involves "[...] specific relations between self and other, a
particular way of 'being involved with something'. The experience of
liveness results from our conscious act of grasping virtual entities as
live in response to the claims they make on us" (Auslander 2012, p. 10).

We can, therefore, understand liveness as a dispositive that produces a
particular subject position, which depends on certain institutional
discourses and frames, which is built relationally between audience
members, between contexts of use and between technologies.

Liveness is a complex process that needs to be observed by looking at the
reflections on the ecosystem of multimedia arts (Balzola, Monteverdi), the
digital experimentation on theatre (Giannachi, Monteverdi, Pizzo) and the
processes of crossmediality, intermediality and transmediality of
performing arts.

On this basis, it is worth understanding which liveness dispositifs are
active in the present performative and artistic experiments. Which
re-articulations of the "here and now" have been produced intermedially and
transmedially, and on a creative, poetic and dramaturgical level? Which new
forms of tele-presence with participants and audiences have been developed?
In which way have the bodily and haptic experience of digital environments
been employed?

The need of artists and theatre organisations to mitigate the closure of
theatres and live events during the lockdown, marked a step forward in the
research on the different gradients of liveness (Gemini, Brilli, Giuliani
2020), which began with 20th century artistic experiments and continues in
the numerous investigations of contemporary performance artists.

This third issue of *Connessioni Remote* intends to map the performative
practices that reflect on the dimensions of liveness, both in offline and
online contexts.

Contributions may address but are not limited to the following topics:

-          review of studies and research on the theme of liveness in
mediatised contexts;

-          analysis of multimedia, transmedia, intermedial liveness
practices;

-          performing arts during the pandemic: between streaming and
archives;

-          digital liveness and platforms: case studies on Instagram,
YouTube, Zoom, Telegram, Twitch, etc.;

-          digital liveness and networked publics;

-          re-elaboration of the concept of liveness in the light of recent
artistic and media reflections and experimentations;

-          audience experiences of liveness.

Authors are invited to submit abstracts of a maximum of *1000 characters*
including spaces on the above-listed topics in *Italian or English*
together with *4-5 keywords*.

Abstracts should be sent by *15 October 2021* to
*[log in to unmask]* <[log in to unmask]>.

The Editorial Board will select a maximum of *10 abstracts* based on
thematic and methodological innovativeness for the current critical debate.
Authors will be contacted by email by the editorial board to submit the
final text through the OJS platform by registering online. Full articles
must be between *30,000 and 40,000 characters* long, including spaces,
notes and bibliography, and must be unpublished. Authors are requested to
consult in advance the guidelines for the graphic editing of the article
and the editorial standards.  Articles not following these guidelines will
be rejected. Articles of adequate quality and adherence to the objectives
of the Journal will be reviewed and subjected to double blind refereeing.

For further information: [log in to unmask]
--

Anna Maria Monteverdi

Dipartimento Beni Culturali e ambientali Università Statale di Milano

www.annamonteverdi.it

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