Call for Papers
The
contours of media study are increasingly understood in environmental terms.
This "spatial
turn" recasts our ideas about the ways in which we
encounter media objects, spaces, and vectors. It is in the cross-sections
of space and epistemology that we are articulating the conceptual catalyst
of
the “media field” and convening our conference. Media fields
bring into contact explorations of material spaces, unseen and transmitted
atmospherics,
and the languages and knowledges through which they are imagined, traversed,
and constituted. Fields may be open grounds, areas on which games are
played, bodies are screened, and militaries operate; fields include
vast expanses
of concrete, electricity, waste, or oil. Fields are breeding grounds
and graveyards,
public and private; they are represented and replayed in bars, airplanes,
and memories. Media fields comprise multi-sensory and synaesthetic
ways of knowing.
Fields of media are residual, anachronistic, or embedded in cultural
products and histories. The stuff of everyday life—garbage dumps,
exhibitions, urban spaces, archives, political campaigns, battlefields,
and daydreams—are
also fields of forces where media are built, broadcast, and worked
through.
The scope of this conference is interdisciplinary, though we are especially
interested in work that reflects upon Media Studies itself as a dynamic
field of study. We also invite artistic projects for exhibition. You might
consider
the following questions:
--How do we
sense, experience, or know media fields or constellations? How might sounds,
textures, temperatures, vibrations, odors, tastes,
and densities
inform our understanding of disparate sites, from video games to the Olympic
Games?
--How does site-specific fieldwork lead to different kinds of knowledge about
film or media, spaces, and their histories? What are the stakes of such shifts?
What becomes of the text in the field?
--How might attention to residue, disjuncture and media sedimentation inform
media historiography, policy, or activism?
--How are media flows not only smooth, transnational, and democratic but
made viscous by uneven access to wireless zones, copyright regulations, surveillance,
waste and pollution, electronic warfare, and everyday malfunctions that characterize
mechanically reproduced media objects and processes?
--How are places of leisure, commerce, intimacy, law, and study co-impacted,
reinvented, or elided by media?
--How do film and media artists, theorists, and policy-makers evoke fields?
--How might the concept of the “field” generate interdisciplinary
discussion of media spaces and epistemologies?
Please submit abstracts or project descriptions of 300 words or less to ucsb.media.fields@gmail.com.
We encourage you to provide biographical information about yourself along
with your abstract.
Deadline for submission: December 18th 2006.