Grids
govern our landscapes and cityscapes, our paintings and grocery lists, our maps
and our borders, both walled and imaginary. They get us our energy and water,
they fuel our online social lives, and structure the ways we perceive and move
through space. On the one hand, the grid is a representational mode, one of
rendering the world under a Euclidean regime of points, lines, and areas. On
the other, it is the material infrastructure of utilities, transit routes and
architecture. In an increasingly networked control society, data, numbers, and
figures are in a constant feedback loop with material reality. Across this
material-physical and the cultural-technical – between instantiations of the
grid as artistic practice and as the “stuff you can kick” (Lisa Parks 2015) –
we find a mess of politics and ideology, corporate and common interest.
For this
issue, we encourage thinking ‘Off the Grid’ – calling for papers that envision
and/or enact within, outside, through or against systems of perception, matter,
energy and space. Papers might explore perspectives against logics that distribute
power across concepts and cables, design and tarmac, techniques and
technologies. This might mean engaging with what Shannon Mattern calls the
“ether and ore” of contemporary urban and rural societies (2017), or it could
involve tracing (dis)order in less concrete structures of visuality, spatiality
and discourse.
Is there a connection between a landscape gridded with pipelines
and by modern scientific cartography? Or perhaps a shared logic between a grid
of fiber-optics and the data societies it facilitates? To what extent is the
grid by its very operation an instrument of national or corporate power – or
can it be appropriated for the commons?
Ultimately,
going ‘Off the Grid’ might be considered a romantic, futile gesture; a
slantwise shift across preordained perspectives; an impossible step outside
ideology; or an urgent tactic of resistance. If Western modernity and the grid
go hand in hand – as suggested by Rosalind Krauss’ account of modern art’s
gravitation towards “flattened, geometricized, ordered” forms (1985) – then
what would it mean to challenge, repurpose or reject it? Does the concept still
help us to understand the world, or limit expression within it?
For the
second issue of Soapbox, a graduate peer-reviewed journal for cultural analysis,
we invite young researchers to submit abstracts that critically engage with
notions of the ‘Grid’. We encourage submissions that are directed towards, but
not limited to, the following themes:
- Modes of resistance or alternatives to the grid as mode of organisation
- The grid as (or as alternative to) network, assemblage, empire and/or entanglement
- Grids at the intersection of cultural geography and cultural analysis
- Infrastructure: infrastructural crises and failures, the edge of infrastructure
- (De)centralised power: the energy commons, democracy and climate crisis
- Cityscapes, urban ecologies and planning
- The rural as ‘off the grid’, against the grid, or as a grid
- Living off the grid: alternative lifestyles and escapism; survivalism and wilderness
- Grids in modern and contemporary art, architecture and design
- Visual (dis)order and film: quadrants, grids and golden ratios in mise-en-scène
- Grids in and as gaming; ‘NPCs’, ‘normies’ and meme culture
- Data, networks and digital traces
Please
submit your abstract (max 300 words) to submissions@soapboxjournal.com by
December 1, 2018. The full papers (3000-5000 words) are due February 15, 2018. Feel free to
contact us if you have any questions.
Soapbox also welcomes texts on any topic, all year-round – send full drafts of
4,000-6,000 words to submissions@soapboxjournal.com.
Also
consider contributing to our website, where a variety of styles and formats is
encouraged, including short-form essays, reviews, experimental writing and
multimedia. Please get in touch to pitch new ideas or existing projects for us
to feature there.
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