In what ways do questions of materiality matter in a time of crisis?
What does it mean to explore the matter of things at a time when we are
threatened with the annihilation of that matter, its disappearance, or its
disintegration? The second issue of MAST journal seeks to answer and further
explore these questions through essays from arts practitioners and theorists.
Questions of materiality have been central to both media arts practice
and media and communication theory. In most accounts, media is situated as the
‘inbetween’ of bodies. A sender and a receiver, one and another, stand at
either side of a divide and communicate via a medium. In this sense, media
might, following Sybille Krämer’s (2015) reading of Habermas, be considered
erotic, connecting material bodies, providing the conditions for the emergence
of material assemblages. Of course, media may undertake the opposite role, as
Krämer also points out, dividing matter into separate bodies, keeping the
sender and receiver at a distance. Media arts practice in the most general
sense has been about asking questions about these functions of mediation, which
connect, divide and express materialities.
Another approach to questions of materiality and media focuses on the
matter of media, particularly with respect to the way it may provide the
framing for discourse, social relationships and experience in general.
Friedrich Kittler (1999) perhaps most famously said that ‘media determine our
situation’, pointing to the impact of technical media on the conditions for
discourse in the 20th century. Or as Daniel Miller argues, it is often the
invisibility of material objects that give them their power. Miller writes,
“objects are important not because they are evident and physically constrain or
enable, but often precisely because we do not ‘see’ them. The less we are aware
of them, the more powerfully they can determine our expectations by setting the
scene and ensuring normative behaviour, without being open to challenge”
(Miller 5). The field has been grappling with these questions since its
inception, and we feel that now, due to intense changes in the political and
ecological systems of our planet, the time has come to try and see how we might
further these modes of inquiry to address times of crisis. For this second
issue, MAST journal is looking for essays from media arts practitioners that
theorize, reflect on or otherwise explore their own practice in relation to
these themes, as well as essays from media theorists, media philosophers and
media archaeologists that address materiality and media art practice.
In this issue, we invite essays that address the topic of materiality in
relation to our contemporary political, environmental, social or economic state
of emergency. We want authors to build on the work already done in the field to
see how the materiality of media is implicated in or impacted by the emergence
(as etymologically related to emergency) of these conditions. Furthermore, we
are interested in receiving essays that address strategies of resistance to dominant
paradigms or that offer alternative futures through the lens of materiality. We
also welcome essays that conduct a rear-view analysis, exploring the
relationship between the materiality of media at other times of crisis.
We would welcome diverse responses to the topic of materiality, media
and emergency. Topics of interest may include, but are not limited to:
- materiality and ecological crisis
- materiality and media art responses to the climate emergency
- materiality and miscommunications
- materiality and waste, pollution and noise
- the disappearance/extinction of material things
- media and materiality in times of conflict
- materiality and displacement
- the concept of emergency/emergence
- media archaeology of/in times of crisis
We encourage submissions in the below categories:
- full papers (4000-6000 words)
- interviews (2000-4000 words)
- exhibition/book reviews (1000-1500 words)
- video articles (5-10 min)
- practice-based studies (media artifacts such as images/video/audio accompanied by a 1000-2000 words essay)
The last category (practice-based studies) is reserved for studies
around media-based artifact(s); in particular, operative media is preferred.
Submissions in this category demonstrate a creative media project as the basis
of developing research and making a contribution to knowledge in the context of
the presented themes in this call. Practiced-based studies may include (and are
not limited to) hybrid media projects, media installations (interactive and
non-interactive), web-based arts, sound arts, database cinema,
virtual/augmented/mixed reality projects. Submissions in the category must
include an essay (1000-2000 words) composed around particular media-based
artifact(s) and engage relevant images (up to 3) and/or link(s) to video/audio.
Essays must be unpublished to be considered, and engaged materials must be
copyright cleared.
Formatting style and full submission guidelines.
The deadline for submissions is 30th June 2020 (for publication in
November 2020).
Please send your submissions (and questions) to editors@mast-nemla.org
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