This Call for Papers doesn't mention origami, but I think it's a golden
opportunity for someone to explore the place of origami in modern material
culture in Asia and elsewhere.
Karen   4/24/2018

CFP for Mechademia 12.2, Materialities Across Asia
<https://networks.h-net.org/user/login?destination=node/1748155>
by Frenchy Lunning

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Type: Call for Papers
Date: June 15, 2018
Location:
United States
Subject Fields:
Asian History / Studies, Cultural History / Studies, Art, Art History &
Visual Studies, East Asian History / Studies, Film and Film History



For the second issue of 2019, the Mechademia: Second Arc journal will focus
on the theme of Materialities Across Asia. Authors are invited to submit
papers on this topic of 5000-7000 words by *June 15, 2018* to submissions
[at] mechademia.net.


Materiality, and the issues of agency, diversity, and access that extend
from particular collections and condensations of materials, have become
topics of increasing interest for both fans and scholars of Asian media in
recent years. As an aesthetic concept, “materiality” opens up questions as
to the relative nature of truth that appears in material objects, and
yields a flurry of discussions from various theoretical positions
concerning the makers, processes, markets, theories, and reception of these
objects. Anime, manga, and gaming, as the primary materials of the otaku
culture, have long since acted as originary objects in the study of the
Asian media mix, in part due to the early introduction of such products
into the global market for toys and other youth-oriented commodities.



However, “materialities across Asia” is a much broader field than its
Japan-associated media mix, and it is becoming increasingly important for
English-language publications to investigate the massive field of globally
related objects emerging from various national, pan-Asian, and
transnational contexts. As many works are now created through transnational
production systems, a focus on materiality calls into question the presumed
relation of many cultural objects to their supposed nation of origin. Along
with “Japanese” anime, plastic models, and Sanrio “fancy goods,” (which are
in fact often produced in China and South Korea), it is necessary to
explore the full gamut of pop-culture related objects in Asia, from
Taiwan’s cute and trendy religious figurines of local deities made for sale
in domestic Family Marts to the many products related to Korean pop idols
and K-drama stars available in Japanese shops and abroad, to name just a
few examples. The impacts of this glut of material objects and their
consequences in the aesthetic, cultural, economic, and environmental realms
are a growing concern for theorists and artists in this field.



For this volume of Second Arc, the editors invite papers of 5000 words or
less which present new research on the historical manifestations and
ongoing impacts of material objects related to East Asian popular culture.
Papers should address the causes and potential effects of this messy
constellation of “things,” not only for contemporary cultures and economies
on the macro scale, but also for the individual makers and users who are on
the vanguard of interpretation, reception, and indeed the very development
of these emerging materialities.

We welcome papers treating, among other themes:

   - The material production processes of visual media, e.g. animated films
   and series, special effects/tokusatsu films, manga/manhwa, puppet plays,
   etc.
   - Collecting and collector culture
   - Archives, databases, and recordings of material culture, e.g. fanzine
   archives
   - Ephemera and memorabilia (pamphlets, event programs, promotional
   items, giveaways, signs, posters, etc.) and their role in fan culture
   - Representing “living objects”: robots, cyborgs, automata, and figures
   that question the dividing line between “object” and “subject”
   - Sex, gender, and “objectification”
   - 2.5D texts and performances
   - Historical trends of development, rupture, or continuity in the
   aesthetic traits, circulation, and reception of material objects
   - Digital materials and materialities
   - Material authenticity
   - Labour and class in pop culture industries
   - Ownership, copyright, and commerce
   - Subcultures based on material objects, collections, fashions, etc.
   - “Brand nationalism” and the integration of goods into discourses of
   national and transnational identity

Contact Info:

Submissions should be 5000-7000 words. The Mechademia Style Guide and Essay
Parameters are available at mechademia.net.
Contact Email: mechade...@mcad.edu
URL: http://www.mechademia.net

Karen Reeds, co-ringleader
Princeton Public Library Origami Group
Affiliate of Origami USA, http://origamiusa.org/
We usually meet 2nd Wednesday of the month, 6:30-8pm, 1st floor Quiet Room.
Free!
We provide paper! All welcome! (Kids under 8, please bring a grown-up.)
Princeton Public Library info:  609.924.9529
https://princetonlibrary.org/

Celebrating 12 years of paperfolding in Princeton!
Our next meetings:  Wednesday,  May 9, 2018

karenmre...@gmail.com

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