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Call for Papers - 'Visual Culture In Crisis: Britain C.1800-Present'

Posted on Monday, 8th October 2012

Visual Culture In Crisis: Britain C.1800-Present
University Of York, Humanities Research Centre, 10 May 2013.

Keynotes: Professor Christopher Pinney (Ucl) And Dr Eric Stryker (Southern Methodist University).

The word ‘crisis’ is frequently invoked to assess Britain’s current place in the world: crises in finance, journalism, politics and geopolitics dominate the media, all of which see the term used both to reflect, and manipulate, a sense of uncertainty and confusion on personal, national, and global levels. Taking its cue from Hardt and Negri’s location of ‘crisis’ as central to European modernity, this conference seeks to explore how visual cultures in Britain during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries have simultaneously responded to – and emerged from – the successive crises that have been deemed to constitute the country’s (post)colonial modernity. Crisis might signify avant-garde break-through and embrace of modernity. It might impel artistic breakdown or flight from modernity, anarchic celebration or resistance in the form of protest. Crisis in visual culture could above all be emblematic of the contingent nature of personal and political identities. As both a product and a precipitant of the inter-state and inter-subjective networks that have emerged in conjunction with imperialism and economic globalisation, crisis can articulate a disharmony between metropole and colony, centre and periphery, state and individual, working constantly to disrupt the geographical, cultural and class boundaries of ‘Britain’.
We welcome submissions from artists and scholars across the humanities and social sciences, but ask that papers address crisis primarily in relation to visual and material cultures. Possible topics include, but are by no means limited to:

Please email abstracts of up to 500 words to Sean Willcock and Catherine Spencer at visualcultureincrisis@gmail.com by Monday 10th December 2012.