V Summer School for the Study of Culture: call for papers, até 31 de Janeiro
Published27 Dec 2014
CULTURAL CITIZENSHIP
June 22nd through 28th 2015
Applications until January 31th 2015
Models of belonging have radically changed with modernity, and allegiances to the nation, to religion, class and tradition have been affected by the global flows, by the creative hybridization of the social, by the claim for rights for new identities (in ethnic, gender or religious terms) and not least by the impact of technological mobility on the lives of individuals and societies. Cultural actors have embraced the change and have been increasingly seeking to reform the very notion of democratic citizenship by dint of creation. As the global flows have helped to question traditional understandings of cultural identity, the notion of citizenship itself has been increasingly reshaped to include new forms of belonging, which often use literature as a mediator in the claim for new legal rights.
On the other hand, a new awareness about the importance of the cultural sector for social and economic sustainability, arising from the role played by the cultural and creative industries has not only given vent to a new professional class, that R. Florida has rightly termed the creative class, but has as well provided new challenges and opportunities for those dissecting cultural work and its meaning making potential.
The idea of culture, either as praxis, as a way of knowledge-production, of individual and collective belonging, as product and as singular creation, cannot do without creativity. While this is undoubtedly true for culture, could the same be argued for the economy? Clearly all human action is marked by some sort of cognitive creativity. One never performs the same task in exactly the same manner, one never thinks twice absolutely alike, and as Derrida contended, repetition does not necessarily mean overlapping. But is this the creativity we wish to consider and does it overlap with creation?
The theme of the V Lisbon Summer School for the Study of Culture focuses on the capabilities of the concept of cultural citizenship as a roadmap for the future, couched in the claim of a new civil contract, sponsored by the arts.
We welcome proposals discussing cultural citizenship from the standpoint of the following issues, amongst others:
- Reforming citizenship in the cultural sector;
- Curating as a strategy of citizenship;
- Globalization and the arts;
- Transglobal flows and literature;
- Literature and new global rights;
- The creative class and cosmopolitan citizenship;
- Cultural policies and entrepreneurship;
- Social media, art and the reform movements;
- Visual culture and the right to look;
Guest Speaker
Marina Abramovic (tbc)
Karl Erik Schøllhammer (PUC-RIO)
Hans Bertens (University of Utrecht)
Luisa Leal de Faria (Catholic University of Portugal)
Esther Peeren (Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis)
Martin Zierold (Karlshochschule International University)
- More to be announced -
Organization
The Summer School will take place at several cultural institutions in Lisbon and will gather doctoral students and post-doctoral researchers from around the world.
In the morning there will be lectures and master classes by invited keynote speakers.
In the afternoon, participants will be divided into groups (according to their topics) which will function as paper sessions with one permanent chair and two rotating respondents per group. Participants will have 15 minutes to deliver their presentations, after which there will be 15 minutes for questions and discussion of each presentation with the chairs and the other participants.
Participants are requested to send their papers two weeks in advance (date to be announced) in order to be circulated amongst chairs and students.
Abstract and paper submissions
Proposals for 15-minute papers should be sent to [email protected] no later than January 31th, 2015.
Submissions should include paper title, abstract in English (200 words), name, e-mail address, institutional affiliation and a brief bio (max. 100 words) mentioning main research interests and ongoing projects.
REGISTRATION
Registration fees
Participants with paper – 250€ for the entire week
Participants without paper – €50 per session/day | 150€ for the entire week
For The Lisbon Consortium students, the students from Universities affiliated with the European Summer School in Cultural Studies, the Phd-Net in Literary and Cultural Studies and members of the Excellence Network in Cultural Studies there is no registration fee.
Organizing Committee
- Isabel Capeloa Gil
- Peter Hanenberg
- Alexandra Lopes
- Paulo de Campos Pinto
- Daniela Agostinho