Kategoriarkiv: Calls for abstracts

CfP Ethnologia Fennica 2/2023: Hope in times of crisis and transformation

Ethnologica Fennica has an open call for abstracts for volume 2/2023 on the theme Hope in times of crisis and transformation. Deadline for the abstract is 20 December 2022.

”The issue 2/2023 of Ethnologia Fennica calls for a broad range of articles that deal with how individuals, activists, communities, or movements mobilize, use, and evoke hope. Where does hope happen, and how? Under which circumstances emerges and flourishes hope? What kind of narratives are constructed based on hope? In what kind of personally overwhelming or global global crises and transformations can hope help to imagine new alternatives and to become resilient and active?”

Please read the full CfP here.

Heritages: Past and present – built and social

HERITAGES: Past and Present – Built and Social
PRAGUE
 
Dates: June 28-30, 2023
Formats: In-person and online
Abstracts: November 25, 2022Themes:  Art, Art & Architectural History, Sociology, Cultural Studies

The Czech Technical University

 
 
HERITAGES: Past and Present – Built and Social
2023 marks the twentieth anniversary of the UNESCO Convention on Cultural Heritage. It established culture as a concept to be safeguarded, as both material objects and social traditions. Today UNESCO seeks to celebrate and safeguard lifestyles, traditions and social groupings. However, the dynamics at play can be complex. Conserving architectural heritage can conflict with development models. Community traditions are threatened by globalization. Monuments are often focal points for cultural contestation. Archeological sites are valued in themselves and simultaneously erased by both the forces of conflict and ‘progress’. However, the past and the present also overlap and mutually support. Placemaking sees built and cultural heritage as key to urban practice. Community groups are documented in museums. Galleries present historical art while debating the role of the artist activist. Reflecting this scenario, this conference seeks papers on heritage from various standpoints: sociology, human geography, anthropology, art history, heritage studies, community architects and more.

Virtual conference: Representing pasts – visioning futures

REPRESENTING PASTS – VISIONING FUTURES
VIRTUAL

Dates: December 1-3, 2022
Formats: Online
Abstracts: October 20, 2022

Themes: Art, Art History, Media, Cultural Studies, Architecture, Urban Design

Queen’s University Belfast | Cape Peninsula University of Technology | National University of Singapore

  
REPRESENTING PASTS – VISIONING FUTURES

What makes a city livable? Transport, housing, health and environment. Matters of culture, entrepreneurship, crime and safety. Affordability and education. Depending on whose ‘livability index’ you look at, it may include design quality, sustainability and the digital infrastructures of the smart city. Other criteria applied may encompass food access, job opportunities or walkability. Inclusivity and the politics of participation also come into play. Discrimination in all its forms is key. The past two decades have seen an exponential rise of livability measures. Reflecting increased urbanity globally, they risk making the notion of the city ever more contested. For example, affordable housing is a neighbourhood issue. It is often linked to other questions: walkability, transport access, food deserts, and poor-quality public space. The design of our neighborhoods and buildings is connected to public health, mental wellbeing and the ‘economics’ of healthy cities. This conference examines the livability of the city from these diverse perspectives.

 

Artefacta conference 2023: CFP Extended deadline to 18 September

The Call for Papers for the 3rd International Artefacta Conference: Agency Conference is now open. And the deadline to submit a proposal has been extended to 18 September 2022!

The Third International Artefacta Conference will be organised in Turku, Finland on 16–17 February 2023. The theme of the conference is agency and objects.

The University of Turku, and the Åbo Akademi University, Turku, Finland

 

Conference Theme

Agency has become one of the most debated and productive concepts in the study of artefacts and material culture. Basically, it refers to the capacity to create an action or intervention and produce a particular effect, whether physical, emotional, social or cultural. The Third International Artefacta Conference focuses on this multifaceted concept and the recent advances and innovations in the field of artefact studies that it has inaugurated. What are the limits and abilities of objects to exert power over each other, to humans and their environment? What does it imply to acknowledge the agency of things, both in the past and the present?

In parallel with the conceptual re-evaluation of agency in the humanities and social sciences, new scientific and conservation methods of analysing the material properties of artefacts have transformed our understanding of things, humans and their interactions with the environment. They allow seeing technology as well as the production, use and material change of artefacts in more detailed and fascinating ways. Similarly, novel methods of artefact analysis have revolutionised our approach to cultural transmission, or the experimentation, decision-making, and choices related to material culture.

The Third International Artefacta Conference will discuss agency in relation to objects with a very wide and inclusive understanding of the concept.

We call for papers which examine and explore various aspects of the agency of artefacts in the field of the humanities as well as natural and social sciences. The papers can range from individual case studies to methodological considerations and theoretical reflections.

The topics may include, but are not limited to, to the following:

– How an artefact or artefact group affect humans and/or the environment?
– How is the agency of artefacts created by materials, living creatures, and/or the environment?
– Is agency a useful and/or appropriate concept when analysing artefacts and material culture in the past or in the present?
– The agency of artefacts as a cultural, material, and/or sociological phenomenon
– The expressions and conceptualisations of the agency of artefacts in different historical and prehistoric periods, cultures, and academic disciplines
– The methods and theories of examining the agency of artefacts
– Considering the multitude of human and non-human agents involved in conservation, to whom are conservators preserving cultural heritage?

Confirmed keynote speakers

Prof. Tine Damsholt, University of Copenhagen
Prof. Bjørnar Olsen, University of Tromsø

Huom! Suomenkielisiä esitelmäehdotuksia hyväksytään

Voit lähettää myös suomenkielisen esitelmäehdotuksen. Niistä kootaan konferenssiin oma sessionsa. Suomenkielisistä esitelmistä pyydämme (myöhemmin) lyhyen englanninkielisen abstraktin.

Important Dates

The call of papers closes on 18 September 2022.

The acceptance of papers will be announced on 3 October 2022.

Registration for the conference closes on 16 December 2022.

The conference takes place on 16–17 February 2023.
 

Submit a paper proposal

Please, submit your proposal for a paper using this form: https://sites.utu.fi/artefacta2023/call-for-papers/

Inquiries

Please, email all inquiries to artefacta2023@gmail.com

CFA: European Ethnology and Baltic, Central and Eastern European Studies: Where do we come from and where are we going?

Call for abstracts:

Panel at the CBEES Annual Conference, Södertörn University: Where are we now? Perspectives on East European Area Studies today

1-2 December 2022, Stockholm, Sweden

DEADLINE for abstract 22 August 2022

Panel description:

European Ethnology and Baltic, Central and Eastern European Studies: Where do we come from and where are we going?

The discipline of Ethnology has, for as long as it has existed, been inextricably intertwined with national and regional politics. In the wake of romantic nationalism, its role in documenting, analysing and even reconstructing ‘authentic’ national culture was seen as essential. Already from its ‘founding period’ in the first half of the 20th century, however, international connections were central for establishing European Ethnology as a scholarly discipline, not least with regards to formulating common scientific theories, central concepts, and scientific ways of working. Before the Second World War and during the Cold War, international cooperation was also significant for maintaining scholarly work, despite political limitations posed by dictatorships.

For a few decades now, ethnological knowledge about the region has been produced against the geopolitical backdrop of the end of the Cold War, often labelling it post-socialist (e.g. Burawoy 2000; Chari & Verdery 2009; Hann, Humphrey & Verdery 2003). Ethnographic thick descriptions and the focus on everyday culture were regarded the discipline’s advantages in order to capture the real-life consequences of the economic transformation, compared to quantitative and macro-approaches. More recently the conceptualisation of the region as postsocialist has been criticised for, among other things, reproducing the epistemic hegemony of the West, for orientalising the region, for its inherent connection to the economic transformation, and for situating very different societies in the past and exaggerating the impact a common socialist past has had on the region (e.g. Cervinkova 2012; Müller, 2019).

Against this background, and considering the vast geopolitical changes and crises Europe is undergoing – including the massive impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the ongoing war – this panel seeks to explore the changing face of European Ethnology, paying particular attention to geopolitical context, both historically and in the present – and to discuss its future. A central question of the panel is how ethnological knowledge is produced and how this knowledge production is related to the political frameworks and to the current geopolitical ‘backdrop’. With what can European Ethnology contribute to increase the knowledge and understanding of the consequences of current political polarisations, multiple crises and ongoing war in Europe? After February 24: How can we continue to work together scholarly if we are once again politically divided – and what can we learn from the discipline’s past about the conditions for, and advantages and potential pitfalls of such collaborations?

We welcome papers on topics such as:

  • Collaboration, exchanges, and power relations in the region and in academia beyond Cold War geographical imaginaries and the West-East axis
  • Critical interventions on the usage of postsocialism in ethnographic theory and applied research
  • Critical examinations of – and power relations connected to – the way scholars conceptualise the region
  • New ways of defining and conceptualising the region, in particular related to ethnographic Area Studies
  • Discussions on the past and future relationship between European Ethnology and Area Studies, considering current geopolitical events
  • Discussions on current and future impact of European Ethnology and ethnographic Area Studies post-24 February 2022

Conveners:

Associate Professor Petra Garberding (Department of Historical and Contemporary Studies, Södertörn University)

Professor Jenny Gunnarsson Payne (Department of Historical and Contemporary Studies, Södertörn University)

Dr. Florence Frölich (Department of Historical and Contemporary Studies, Södertörn University)

PhD-student Aleksandra Reczuch (Department of Historical and Contemporary Studies, Södertörn University)

 

We welcome contributions that address one or more of the themes outlined above.

The proposals should include the title of the paper, an abstract (max. 400 words), and a short bio of the author(s) including the contact details (name, email address, affiliation). Please send your proposal to jenny.gunnarsson.payne(at)sh.se by 22 August 2022. The accepted proposals will be announced by 27 August 2022.

Artefacta conference: Call for papers

Arbetsgruppen för nätverket Artefacta efterlyser nu abstrakt för konferensen som ordnas i Åbo 16-17 februari 2023. Temat för konferensen är Agens (i alla tänkbara former) i den materiella världen. Konferensen ordnas som samarbete mellan Åbo Universitet och Åbo Akademi. Deadline för CFP 4 september 2022.

Keynotes av:
Prof. Tine Damsholt, University of Copenhagen
Prof. Bjørnar Olsen, University of Tromsø

Även studenter, t.ex. graduskribenter kan delta i egna rundabordsdiskussioner (kolla närmare i CFP).

Webbsidor: https://sites.utu.fi/artefacta2023

Hela Call for Papers samt  och inskickning av abstrakt på:
https://sites.utu.fi/artefacta2023/call-for-papers/

Call for abstracts: Ethnologia Scandinavica

To the 2023 edition of the journal Ethnologia Scandinavica we now welcome article proposals.

The editors receive proposals in abstract format until the 10th of june. Provided that the proposals are accepted, we look forward to a complete script 1st of November when a review process starts.
Ethnologia Scandinavica is ranked level 2 on the so-called Norwegian list, as well as the Finnish scientific community’s counterpart. ES is also approved for the European reference index for the humanities and social sciences (ERIH PLUS).
Welcome with your article suggestions!
Lars-Eric Jönsson (editor in chief)
————–

Inför 2023 års upplaga av tidskriften Ethnologia Scandinavica välkomnas nu förslag på artiklar.

Redaktionen tar till och med 10 juni emot förslag i abstract-format. Under förutsättning att förslagen accepteras ser vi fram emot ett komplett manus 1 november då en granskningsprocess tar vid.
Ethnologia Scandinavica är rankad på nivå 2 på den s.k. norska listan, liksom på det finska vetenskapliga samfundets motsvarighet. ES är också godkänd för European reference index for the humanities and social sciences (ERIH PLUS).
Välkommen med artikelförslag!
Lars-Eric Jönsson (huvudredaktör)


https://gustavadolfsakademien.se/tidskrifter

Call for abstracts till Budkavlen 2023

(O)lyckans kulturella praktiker, Budkavlen 2023

Call for abstracts

Lycka och olycka har länge varit ett centralt tema för folkliga föreställningar. Uppfattningarna om vad lycka eller olycka är har däremot varierat. Lyckan har t.ex. setts som bunden till tid och rum, skiftande och flyktig, en gåva, något eftertraktat, men också odemokratisk och ojämnt fördelad. Både Gud och ödet har fått stå som svar på vad som bringar lycka, samtidigt som det  finns olika folkliga föreställningar om hur man kan påverka sin lycka genom ritualer. Även om lyckan framställts som något utom människans kontroll, så har hon försökt påverka den.

I ett alltmer individualiserat samhälle lägga individens förmåga att påverka sin egen lycka i centrum. Att lyckan är det högsta målet för en persons liv är underförstått, och därmed hamnar de kulturella, historiska och samhälleliga strukturerna i skymundan. Alla är sin egen lyckas smed, men vad och hur förväntas vi smida? I likhet med äldre folkliga föreställningar finns det idag en mängd föreställningar om hur lyckan tar sig uttryck, hur man uppnår den, samt vad som gör människor olyckliga.

I detta temanummer av tidskriften Budkavlen uppmanar vi skribenterna att fundera på lyckans och olyckans kulturella praktiker. Fokus kan ligga på exempelvis diskursiva framställningar av (o)lycka, (o)lyckliga vardagsritualer, eller (o)lycka som genre. Hur används, retoriskt eller performativt, (o)lycka i skapandet av en text, ideologi, handling, tankesätt osv?

Skicka in ditt abstract på 300–400 ord till budkavlen(@)abo.fi senast 31.5.2022. Deadline för färdiga artiklar är 31.3.2023.

Även artiklar utanför det givna temat tas emot för granskning och eventuell publicering.

Vänliga hälsningar,

Gästredaktörer Sofia Wanström & Bettina Westerholm