If the scholarship on photography has often lodged its cultural and
philosophical significance within the epistemological framework of evidence, it
has also increasingly taken into account how photography was the medium of
choice for bringing the foreign and the exotic to the salons of the European
bourgeoisie thirsting for images and texts from newly-colonized territories
(Sekula 1981, Shohat 2008, Göttsche 2013). By maintaining close ties with anthropology (Pinney 2001), as well as
with colonial administrators and military personal, photography perpetuated
long- held identity constructions within asymmetrical power relations and
transmitted them as supposed “truths” to various European and American
ethnological museums, thus accounting for their extraordinarily large archives
(Geary 1988).
Beyond its function as anthropological record, photography’s use
as source for shaping historical narratives runs in parallel to its ability to
provide a “reckoning with history” (Tucker, Campt 2009), by bringing (visual,
textual etc.) sources to their limits and by unmasking the constructed
dimension to the narratives they are meant to articulate. Moreover, though the
archive bestows upon photography and cinema — its preeminent materials — the
authoritative status of document (Ellenbogen 2012), differing epistemologies
continue to underpin its various stakeholders (Hamminga 2016) exceeding their
initial framework of reference. And although (moving) images suture the subject
into a supposedly scientific, anthropological, or historical project, buried
within the very process which representation eclipses is a greater uncertainty
as to the kind of history that is being inscribed, and most importantly, whose history is being told.
Consequently, the special section of the issue number 17 of Cinergie
analyzes how images “disturb the core nodes of historical relations and
practices of history” (Edwards 2016) rather than how they constitute it through
nation-building. By investigating how artists re- appropriate (anthropological,
scientific, or historical etc.) photography and film, and how they re-read them
against their own original trace, as in against the very object whose presence
they inscribe, this volume examines how images are deployed against the history
they are thought to depict. Cinergie seeks to historicize this failure of
evidentiary and documentary claims to visual media as disturbances causing
epistemic shifts. Furthermore, it focuses on how their narratives remain
ever-shifting despite theorists' use of “context” (understood here as the fruit
of a process of framing and of interpretation attempts to give meaning and
coherence) as a reliable backdrop to comprehending them and pinning them down.
By asking how certain archival practices and the system of knowledge they
bespeak inadvertently undermine institutional power, this section considers how
instability has always been integral rather than contingent to the image and
how fractures are part of the archive, irrelevant of the framework made to fix
its internal contradictions.
Contributions will be considered that include but are not limited to:
- How do artists employ colonial, scientific, or historical photography and film in order to shift their initial significance and what kind of new epistemologies do they create in the process?
- How do scientists, photographers, officials etc. attempt to palliate contradictions between the visual materials they generate and the theories they formulate?
- How do various artistic operations question the constitution of indexicality, and have the image emerge as a site of contested encounters resisting collection and interpretation even (or especially) within the archive?
Submission details
Please send an abstract and a short biographical note to Dr. Hanin
Hannouch, Post- Doctoral researcher at the Kunsthistorisches Insitut in
Florenz, Max-Planck-Institut at: hanin.hannouch@khi.fi.it by December 31, 2019
— [subject: Unstable Images and Shifting Histories: Photography, Anthropology,
Cinema + name surname author(s)].
Abstracts should be from 300 to 500 words of length (English).
If the proposal is accepted, the author(s) will be asked to submit the
full article by February 15, 2020.
The articles must not exceed 5,000/6,000 words.
Contributions will be submitted to double-blind peer-review.
The issue number 17 of Cinergie will be published in July 2020
Edited by Dr. Hanin Hannouch (Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz,
Max-Planck-Institut)
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario