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Call for Contributions to Sarai Reader 07: The Frontier I. Introducing the Sarai Reader Sarai (www.sarai.net), an interdisciplinary research and practice programme at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies, invites contributions to Sarai Reader 07: The Frontier We also invite proposals to initiate and moderate discussions on the themes of the Sarai Reader 06 on the Reader List (http:// mail.sarai.net/mailman/listinfo/reader-list) with a view to the moderator(s) editing the transcripts of these discussions for publication in the Sarai Reader 07. For an outline of the themes and concerns of Sarai Reader 07, see the Concept Outline below (section II). To know about the format of the articles that we invite, see 'Guidelines for Submissions' (sections III and IV) below. This year, like last year, the Sarai Reader has been invited to participate in the 'Journal of Journals' magazine project of Documenta 12. (see http://www.documenta12.de/magazine.html?&L=1). Content from Sarai Reader 07 will be selected by the Sarai editorial collective to be published online on the Documenta 12 Magazine webpage. The Sarai Reader is an annual publication produced by Sarai/CSDS (Delhi). Previous Readers have included 'The Public Domain: Sarai Reader 01', 2001, 'The Cities of Everyday Life: Sarai Reader 02', 2002, 'Shaping Technologies: Sarai Reader 03', 2003, 'Crisis/Media: Sarai Reader 04', 2004, 'Bare Acts: Sarai Reader 05', 2005 and 'Turbulence: Sarai Reader 06', 2006. All the Sarai Readers are available for free download at http://www.sarai.net/journal/journal.htm The Sarai Reader series aims at bringing together original, thoughtful, critical, reflective, well researched and provocative texts and essays by theorists, practitioners and activists, grouped under a core theme that expresses the interests of Sarai in issues that relate media, information and society in the contemporary world. The Sarai Readers have a wide international readership. Editorial Collective for Sarai Reader: Jeebesh Bagchi, Monica Narula, Ravi Sundaram, Ravi Vasudevan, Awadhendra Sharan, Shuddhabrata Sengupta, (Sarai, Delhi) and Geert Lovink (Institute of Network Cultures, Amsterdam) II. Concepts and Questions for Sarai Reader 07: Frontiers Frequently at frontiers we are asked, 'Anything to declare?' The wisest thing to do when faced with the scrutiny of a border official is to say that you have 'Nothing to declare', and quickly move on. Crossing borders usually entails an effort not to say too much, or at least to get by with saying very little. A degree of reticence is the mark of the wise and experienced traveller. Sarai Reader 07: The Frontier, seeks to turn this ethic of reticence on arrival at a boundary, at any boundary, on its head. This time, the Reader will consider limits, edges, borders and margins of all kind to be sites for declarations, occasions for conversation, settings for the staging of arguments, debates, recounting and reflection. We invite you to consider the frontier as an open door, a chute into something new, or the rediscovery of that which has been obscured, a hidden tunnel that crosses under a mountain, a porous membrane of liminal possibilities, a zone of contact and contagion. We want to think of the frontier as the skin of our time and our world, and we invite you to get under the skin of contemporary experience in order to generate a series of subcutaneous reflective possibilities. For us, the frontier is a threshold waiting to be crossed, a space rife with the possibility of seductive transgression. The feeling of being on the edge of something has persisted for most of our lifetimes. The twentieth century was an exhausting journey into a receding future, and the first decade of the twenty-first continues to entrance us with the seduction of what seems to be forthcoming forever. We are all pioneers now, chasing and being chased by the shifting border-posts of the frontiers given to us by history. Yet our enterprises of pioneering do not necessarily carry with them any longer the confidence of self proclaimed 'avant gardes'. We are scouts sent in to scan the lay of the land of the territory of uncertainty. Our reports are the dispatches that chronicle, not our conquest of, but our continuing bewilderment about, the times we inhabit. We are not talking here only of actual, physical borders (though of course we are interested in physical and political borders) which are usually the residues of war, but also of the borders between different temporal registers, between languages, between different ways of doing things, between different bodies of thought and conviction. Looked at this way, the frontier is more a condition than a site, more a way of being and doing things, than a constellation of border posts on the ground. The DMZ of the present, straddling the recent past and the immediate future, is the most striking frontier of all, inviting us to consider the continuities and ruptures, revolutions and restorations that litter the landscape of all our histories like bunkers and watchtowers on either side. We could also consider the borders between faith and doubt, between technology and technique, between history and memory, between art and science, between literature and reportage, between the empirical and the speculative. We are interested in all forms of expression that straddle these spaces, especially in those that make forays into those zones of exception, such as prisons, detention camps, sites of remand and quarantine that maintain human beings at the edge. Here we see the relentless production of states of exception by power in a way that constantly redefines the boundaries of what might be considered normal. With each passing day, the normal condition of the world comes to resemble yesterday's state of exception, and today's state of exception seeks to lay the foundations of tomorrow's normality. This tension between the exception and the rule is another kind of frontier, which we hope will provoke new investigations. Today, we live in cities that expand by evacuating people from centres and relocating them onto empty hinterlands. The shifting locus of infrastructural renewal in megacities constantly generates new urban frontiers. Here, in these liminal spaces which resemble maps and grids more closely than they do actual spaces for habitation, the question of what it is to be urban in the time of evictions is asked with a violent, daily urgency. A rough list of questions and concepts that Sarai Reader 07 wants to take on could be as follows: 1. The tension between exceptions and rules as the necessary mark of a frontier of the human condition today. Ways in which architectures, instruments and devices to do with the regulation of social, political and personal life, of ethics and politics, re-define the boundaries of our being and consciousness. The tightening and loosening of the armour of society and politics. 2. Reconsidering lines that cannot be crossed - in political, social, ethical and aesthetic terms. The idea of taboos, transgressions and the forbidden, especially in the light of what has come to be termed as 'political correctness'. 3. The shifting frontiers and outposts of legality in everyday life. 4. The borders between practices - such as software and art, or performance and contemporary social ritual, or between forms - such as between cinema and the internet, between digital and analog technologies, or between different registers of reflection - such as history and literature. 5. Connections and contacts, especially between things and ideas that would seem at first to be distant or adversarial in relation to each other. Hybridities, Contagion and infections - between belief systems (sometimes generating heresies), languages and ways of doing things 6. Reflections on the idea of the 'urban frontier' wherever it may be found. Here by 'urban frontier' we mean those new and transforming edges where the limits of the urban condition are being tried and tested through eviction and resettlement. 7. Architectures of separation, exclusion, inclusion and connectivity. 8. Mobility and obstacles. Is the internet any longer a borderless space? 9. The border between the real and the virtual, the physical and the mental, role-playing and reality 10. Activities that involve unusual kinds of border crossing - smuggling, immigration, illicit and unconscious trade, globalization from below 11. The border as a feature of a fluid political geography - walls (like at the Mexico US Border), fences (like on India-Bangladesh- Pakistan borders), demilitarized zones (like in Korea), buffers, enclaves, outposts and other unstable units of space. Histories and accounts of frontier areas, and of shifting borders. 12. Frontiers of the imagination. Space Travel, Science Fiction, Utopias, Alternative Realities and their continuing presence in our lives. We want to invite practitioners and others, some of whom may be audacious even as others may be tentative, wherever in the world they may be located, whether in the domains of theory, research, contemporary art, media, information and software design, politics or commentary to join us in the making of Sarai Reader 07. You are invited to contribute through essays, dialogues, arguments, interviews, photographs, image-text combinations, comics, art-works, diary entries, research reports, commentaries and manifestos that can evoke the idea of the frontier in all its myriad dimensions. SARAI READER 07 and documenta 12 This year (like last year) the Sarai Reader has been invited to participate in the 'Journal of Journals' magazine project of documenta 12. "documenta (with a lower-case 'd') is an exhibition of modern and contemporary art which now takes place every 5 years in Kassel, Germany. It was founded by Arnold Bode in 1955 .The more recent documentas feature art from all continents and are perceived to have been some of the most significant contemporary art exhibitions to have taken place internationally. documenta 12 features a 'journal of journals' project that invites leading critical and reflective publications from all over the world to participate in a collaborative curatorial and editorial exercise to generate a global frame of contemporary discourse." For details, see http://www.documenta12.de/magazine.html?&L=1 III. Guidelines for Submissions Word Limit: 1500 - 4000 words 1. Submissions may be scholarly, journalistic or literary - or a mix of these, in the form of essays, papers, interviews, online discussions or diary entries. All submission, unless specifically solicited, must be in English only. Submissions may also be only images or images and text. The Reader is printed in black and white. 2. Text submissions must be sent by email as .rtf, or as word document or open office attachments. Articles may be accompanied by black and white photographs or drawings submitted in the first in the .jpeg format accompanying the text (if any) and then in .tif format if there is decision to print. Ftp server details will be made available if needed. 3. We urge all writers to follow the Chicago Manual of Style (CMS) in terms of footnotes, annotations and references. For more details about the CMS and an updated list of Frequently Asked Questions, see http://www.press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/cmosfaq/cmosfaq.html For a 'Quick Reference Guide to the Chicago Manual of Style', especially relevant for citation style, see http:// www.library.wwu.edu/ref/Refhome/chicago.html 4. All contributions should be accompanied by a three/four line text introducing the author, and an email address they are willing to make public. 5. All submissions will be read by the editorial collective of the Sarai Reader before the final selection is made. The editorial collective reserves the right not to publish any material sent to it for publication in the Sarai Reader on stylistic or editorial grounds. All contributors will be informed of the final decisions of the editorial collective vis a vis their contribution. 6. Copyright for all accepted contributions will remain with the authors. Sarai reserves indefinitely the right to place any of the material accepted for publication on the public domain in print or electronic forms, and on the internet. 7. Accepted submissions will not be paid for, but authors are guaranteed a wide international readership. The Reader will be published in print, distributed in India and internationally, and will also be uploaded in a pdf form on to the Sarai website. All contributors whose work has been accepted for publication will receive two copies of the Reader. IV. Where and When to send your Contributions Last date for submission: 15th May 2007. Please write and send as soon as possible, preferably, latest by the 30th of March, 2007, a brief outline/abstract, not more than one page, of what you want to write about. This helps in designing the content of the reader. We expect to have the reader published by August 2007. Please send in your outlines and abstracts, and images/graphic material, to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Monica Narula Raqs Media Collective Sarai-CSDS 29 Rajpur Road Delhi 110054 www.raqsmediacollective.net www.sarai.net ---- Anivar Aravind Global Alternate Information Applications (GAIA) Peringavu.P.O Thrissur 680018 --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ greenyouth mailinglist is the activist support mailinglist for kerala run by Global Alternate Information Applications (GAIA) To post to this group, send email to [email protected] -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
