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Binary Modernisms 2021 : Binary Modernisms: Re/Appropriations of Modernist Art in the Digital Age | |||||||||||
Link: https://www.openlibhums.org/news/409/?fbclid=IwAR3ysKvfk6vV8Yb1qbg-sjnKBWffpTjkWsoJX864FHucJ7UQiStkTn1qlNs | |||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||
Open Library of Humanities Journal Special Collection: Binary Modernisms: Re/Appropriations of Modernist Art in the Digital Age
Binary Modernisms addresses the convergence of modernism and digital technologies in their disruption of traditional methods of art creation. Drawing on existing discussions of early 20th-century modernism’s disturbance of traditional cultural forms and digital technologies’ effects on the creative process, this collection questions where these two seemingly different approaches to culture and art collide. Binary Modernisms posits that just as modernist trends in literature, performance and visual art were seen as a form of rebellion against the obsolete frameworks of culture production in the beginning of the last century, digital technologies are equally influential on contemporary cultural artefacts and culture production in the contemporary world. As the digital has become increasingly prevalent in approaches to creativity and visual culture creation, it has prompted the reconstruction and/or remediation of existing cultural forms. This process has become even more apparent during the Covid-19 pandemic as digital platforms and tools have taken a more significant place not only in everyday interactions and activities but also in artistic practice, curatorship, viewership, and performance. Altering audiences' interaction with cultural artefacts, digital technology has accelerated culture production and broadened its accessibility, a process not dissimilar to the modernists’ take on established art techniques and formats in the beginning of the previous century. The call invites proposals from scholars of modernist studies, digital humanities and digital culture, fine art, art history, cultural theory, modern and contemporary history, critical studies, film and media, and all adjacent disciplines. Submissions from disciplines not traditionally associated with fine art or modernism, including psychology and computer science, are also encouraged, as long as they respond to the call’s main theoretical concerns. More particularly, the call is interested in topics including (but not limited to): • processes of resistance, remediation, digital hybridisation and/or reassessment of modernism • the question of authorship – the single author, the collaboration between the human and the machine, authorial agency / the agency of the machine • the concept of artistic imagination/the genesis of the work of art • women-authored works • femininity • gender identity • little-known modernist figures • non-Anglophone and transnational modernisms • contemporary and/or digital artists who reappropriate modernist approaches to art • more contemporary approaches to artistic practice including video/sound installations, heritage projects, examples of museum/gallery curatorial projects, and visitor attractions • the translation of the visitor experience from the physical space of the gallery or the museum to digital platforms (e.g. how does modernism translate to the digital world, and the digital transition’s implications on the creative process) • questions of accessibility and neurodiversity in art through digital technologies • the audience’s insight of the experience or the work of art, as well as the challenges this might pose to traditional forms of fine art Please submit an abstract of 250 words and a short biographical statement of 200 words by 14 March, 2021. Authors of successful submissions will be notified by 31 March 2021. Final articles should be approximately 8,000 words in length and will be expected by 31 August 2021. Articles will be subject to double blind peer review. The special collection Binary Modernisms, edited by Dr Zlatina Nikolova (Z.Nikolova2@exeter.ac.uk, University of Exeter), is to be published in the Open Library of Humanities (OLH) (ISSN 2056-6700). The OLH is an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation-funded open-access journal with a strong emphasis on quality peer review and a prestigious academic steering board. Unlike some open-access publications, the OLH has no author-facing charges and is instead financially supported by an international consortium of libraries. To learn more about the Open Library of Humanities please visit: https://www.openlibhums.org/ |
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