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Technovisuality 2008 : Conference on Technovisuality and Cultural Reenchantment | |||||||||||||
Link: http://www.hksyu.edu/english/2008Techno/home.html | |||||||||||||
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Call For Papers | |||||||||||||
Technovisuality and Cultural Reenchantment: Call for Paper
(Please circulate) Call for Paper Conference on Technovisuality and Cultural Reenchantment 21-22 November 2008 Co-Organized by Chinese University of Hong Kong & Hong Kong Shue Yan University http://www.hksyu.edu/english/2008Techno/home.html Daily life is increasingly mediated by technology and remorseless visual stimuli in everyday technovisual forms have now become the very incarnation of what it means to be human. While technovisuality points to the visual as object and site of social interaction, it is also very much about embodiment and how we transform information and knowledge (infoledge) into material and aesthetic forms. Bergson thinks of the body itself as an image among other images, hence the theory of perception as affect (Hansen). Such a process of technical and biological symbiosis entails cultural reenchantment, which takes place where nature and nurture overlap, where becomings through circuits of intensity occur between humans and machines, humans and nonhumans. Think of cinematography, digital images in all media, video games, scientific data visualization, virtual environments - all could be summed up as manifestations of the Figural (Rodowick). Together they encapsulate an epoch of hybridity in a wide range of interactive experiences, in which technovisuality programs more and more intelligence into the very fabric of a new ecology of wonders. Images are now thought to be able to think and to have desires themselves (Mitchell). Within the spaces of visuality, cultural re-enchantment also points to eco-consciousness, warning us of our ecological violence, requiring the re-enchantment of nature by recovering a sense of the sacred as a means of survival. Here, Latour�??s network, Prigogine�??s affirmation of the fabulous in the nature of swerving matter, the quantum enigma in new physics, might be drawn upon in leading us towards what Laszlo calls the re-enchantment of the cosmos. There is nothing unnatural about technology; and like cyberpunk, technology is certainly us. Hence technology does not have to limit itself to those �??technological devices�?? that Heidegger is wary of. In a sense, visualization has always been technological since the beginning of time as a kind of primordial mechanism which has, according to Heidegger, not too much to do with �??the technological.�?? Here oriental philosophy provides an alternative perspective of how cultural reenchantment can be tied to technovision in a broad sense. Suggested themes: 1. Cinematography�??s magical world, and the camera�??s eye. 2. Technovisuality and enchantment in mediated visualization. 3. The history and development of digital images and the way �??nuanced�?? relationship is established between human and nonhuman. 4. Technovisuality, science and philosophy 5. Imagescape as a new ecology 6. On-line gaming as spectacular show case of cultural enchantment 7. Classical Eastern philosophy and contemporary theories of visualization: an interdisciplinary and intercultural approach. 8. Science fiction and film as artifact of cultural reenchantment. 9. Architecture and virtuality 10. Virtual life Important Dates: 4th April - Deadline for submission of abstracts Early May - Acceptance letters sent out 3rd October - Papers Due October - Refereeing 31st October - 10th November - Revise Papers Conference website: http://www.hksyu.edu/english/2008Techno/home.html Conference email address: techno08@hksyu.edu/ technovisual@cuhk.edu.hk Conference Committee: Prof. WONG Kin-yuen Professor and Head Department of English Language & Literature Director Technoscience Culture Research and Development Centre Hong Kong Shue Yan University email: kywong@hksyu.edu Prof. Helen GRACE Associate Professor Department of Cultural and Religious Studies The Chinese University of Hong Kong email: hmgrace@cuhk.edu.hk Dr. Amy CHAN Kit-sze Assistant Professor Department of English Language & Literature Associate Director Technoscience Culture Research and Development Centre Hong Kong Shue Yan University email: amychan@hksyu.edu |
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