For those of us interested in the sonic ...
Begin forwarded message:
> From: Peter Nix <[log in to unmask]>
> Date: Thu Jan 23, 2003 12:13:43 pm Europe/London
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: CFP: Warp:Woof - Aurality/Musicality/Textuality (UK)
> (2/28/03; 7/10/03-7/13/03)
>
> Please forward. Apologies for cross-posting and multiple deliveries.
>
> AHRB CentreCATH (Director: Prof Griselda Pollock)
>
> Call for Papers
>
> CongressCATH 2003: Warp:Woof - Aurality/Musicality/Textuality
>
> http://www.leeds.ac.uk/cath/congress/2003/
>
> AHRB CentreCATH,
> University of Leeds, UK
> 10 - 13 July, 2003
>
> Call
>
> The warp and the woof is the opening of a field. Shifting from
> structuralism to poststructuralism, from system to speaking subject,
> from work to text: this puts into play new possibilities for thinking
> about sound, music, noise and listening, about the structure of
> audition, and about the listening, responding subject. Nietzsche
> diagnosed post-Socratic philosophy as fundamentally and constitutively
> unmusical, however the theory of the text signals the closure of that
> era. There opens a series of deconstructions of the voice in philosophy
> and in the metaphysics of everyday life, and of attempts to change the
> object of analysis itself, sparking genealogies of disciplinary power,
> desire and lines of flight. Although the writers evoked here (Kristeva,
> Barthes, Derrida, Foucault, Deleuze) only rarely themselves evoke those
> of the Frankfurt School, writers slightly out of phase in nation and
> period, nevertheless these writings in their reflections on language,
> technology, subjectivity and power weave a field for thinking
> musically.
>
> Papers on:
>
> New music theories, new musical objects, theorising through music and
> noise. Extra-diegesis: sound and the moving image. Installation and
> sonic art. Radio. Philosophy of rhythm: musical morphologies as modes
> of
> experience, memory, thought and novel perception. Acoustic cartographs:
> local music cultures, dissemination. Considering historical
> soundscapes.
> Grain, interpretation, accent, translation, voice. Acoustical
> technologies, reproduction. media.
>
> Proposals
>
> We invite abstracts of not more than 200 words for papers to be
> submitted by 28 February 2003 on forms available from:
>
> http://www.leeds.ac.uk/cath/congress/2003/call.html
>
> --
> Josine Opmeer
> Centre Coordinator, AHRB CentreCATH
> Old Mining Building, 2.08
> University of Leeds
> LEEDS LS2 9JT
> Tel:+44(113)343-1629
> Fax:+44(113)343-1628
> E-mail: [log in to unmask]
>
>
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>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dr Felicity Callard
Lecturer in Human Geography
Queen Mary, University of London
Mile End Road
London E1 4NS
United Kingdom
t: (011 44) (0)207 882 5416
f: (011 44) (0)208 981 6276
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