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Call for Publications

Theme: Genuine Copies
Subtitle: The Question of Authenticity
Publication: Edited Collection by Russell Cobb
Date: Spring 2012
Deadline: 5.9.2011

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I am seeking contributors for an edited collection on the question of
cultural authenticity. While the texts and artifacts will be
incredibly diverse, the book will be bound together by a series of
common questions, including the following: How does a cultural
product acquire an aura of authenticity? Why does authenticity
continue to matter in an age of endless reproductions, remixes, and
copies? What is the relationship of authenticity to commodification?
These questions were born out of a three-day ACLA Seminar in spring
2011 titled: “Emergent Authenticity: Fakes, Copies, and the Real
Thing in a Global Culture.”

This book springs from a paradox. On the one hand, authenticity is
derided as an out-moded concept. It is taken as an article of faith
that what constitutes “authentic” Mexican food or an “authentic”
urban neighborhood is a social construct. Claims to authenticity in
ethnic literature or music are especially problematic, since
authenticity in the realm of culture must, by its very nature, imply
exclusivity. If one work of art, or type of cuisine, is deemed
authentic, then others must be inauthentic or simply fake. The
symbolic violence inherent in the idea of authenticity makes us weary
of saying the word without scare quotes.

And yet. Authenticity is alive and well, even in this age of pirated
artworks, downloadable mix-tapes, plagiarized novels, and postmodern
irony. From the boom in the marketplace for the first-person,
non-fiction memoirs, to the emergence of the "locavore" movement, to
the staged sincerity of media figures like Glenn Beck, consumers of
contemporary culture demand authenticity. When a writer has been
exposed as a plagiarist, or an artwork as been exposed as a copy,
there is a collective outcry of shame. We want, we demand, not just
realistic, but actually real narratives, as David Shields recently
noted in Reality Hunger: A Manifesto.

This collection will include shorter, provocative essays as well as
longer scholarly articles. Contributors are urged to think
creatively, interdisciplinarly and critically about the topic, while
addressing the questions at hand. Contributors will be selected based
on the relevance of the abstract to the topic of the volume. I hope
to submit a draft of the entire volume to publishers by spring 2012.
If you are interested in the topic, and can commit to that rough
timeline, please send a CV and 400-500 abstract by September 5 to:
Russell Cobb <[email protected]>


Contact:

Dr. Russell Cobb
Department of Modern Languages and Cultural Studies
University of Alberta
409-C Old Arts Building
Edmonton, AB T6G 2E6
Canada
Phone +1 (780) 938-3183
Email: [email protected]
 
 
 
 
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