In Todd
Haynes’ 1995 film Safe, Carol (Julianne Moore) is plagued by ‘multiple chemical
sensitivities’. The character experiences her environment as a series of toxic
threats that cause accumulating and varied physical and psychical consequences.
The film concludes with Carol holed up, alone, in an antiseptic pod in a
therapeutic community in the desert. She will be safe here, as long as she
remains insulated against the ever-increasing threats of the contemporary
world. Thus, it is only through a radically diminished life of social and
cultural isolation that Carol can survive and be ‘well’. Safe, then, raises a
series of questions about the nature and value of toxicity, vulnerability,
safety, and resilience that have become culturally central in the twenty-first
century.
This
conference aims to explore the concept of toxicity in relation to a number of
contemporary political concerns including culture, health, economics, gender,
and ecology. We are concerned to examine how cultural practices (from theatre
to graphic fiction) and critical methodologies, for example in performance
studies, are contributing to, and intervening in, contemporary anxieties about
safety, risk and toxicity.
This
conference brings together a number of distinct but interlocking ideas. There
is a striking contemporary habit to identify phenomena as toxic – from
masculinity to assets, from cultures to environments. In this way, ‘toxic’ no
longer simply refers to specific physical substances but rather to practices,
attitudes, structures and more. Such practices serve to constitute people as
multiply helpless, liable to plural risks and dangers. Discourses in health and
wellbeing movements, for example, frequently reinforce images of people as
vulnerable and promote forms of individualised self-governance and vigilance
that obscure real social and political processes. Related, in the global north,
we are living through a period of renewed debates about freedom of speech,
trigger warnings, and safe spaces on campuses and beyond, all of which tacitly
frame art and ideas as potential threats. In this regard, contemporary
individuality involves becoming a watchful and resilient guard of one’s
sovereign bodily security against infinite and immaterial dangers. Toxicity is,
then, both concrete and atmospheric.
What is at
stake in such images, narratives, and metaphors of toxicity? How far does
describing something like masculinity as ‘toxic’ efface questions of ethics,
power, patriarchy and reinscribe womanhood (and other marginalised categories
of identity) as inevitably vulnerable? To what degree does toxicity reproduce
attitudes to identity and history that are both individualising and fatalistic?
In what ways does the notion of ‘safety’ operate as a means to neutralise
political complaint or resistance? Or might the language of toxicity be
politically generative, insisting on the real-world effects of patterns of
behaviour, structures of economic speculation and disparate practices of
environmental depletion? Does toxicity expose faultlines in cultural norms,
understandings, and values? Put simply, what does toxicity meanand what does it
do? How is toxicity produced, sustained, and distributed? The conference thus
seeks to examine what lies beneath labels of toxicity and interrogate the
complex politics of threat, vulnerability, safety, and resistance.
We invite
papers of 20 minutes that respond to notions of cultures of toxicity in
relation to a wide range of areas including:
- Arts, culture, and performance
- Gender and sexuality
- Health and wellbeing
- Education and pedagogy
- Environments and ecologies
- Structures and systems
- Government and policy
- Political organisation and expression
- Communities and cultures
The
conference will take place at the University of Warwick on Friday 8th and
Saturday 9th November 2019. We would like to receive abstracts of no more than
300 words with an accompanying biog of up to 150 words by 31st March 2019.
Please send your abstract and any questions to a.r.harpin@warwick.ac.uk and
d.rebellato@rhul.ac.uk
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