Dear Sydphil,

Please find below first Call for Papers for The Oral, the Written, and
Other Verbal Media interdisciplinary conference to be held in
Melbourne, December 2011. I thought it might be of interest to Sydphil
subscribers, and hope it can be circulated through our network,

Regards,

Emma Dortins (Department of History, University of Sydney)

********

The Oral, the Written, and Other Verbal Media (OWOVM)

Conference on Poetics and Discourse: 12-14 December, 2011

Hosted by Victoria University (Melbourne, Australia) at its City Campus

First call for proposals: due 30 July 2010

Testimony, Witness, Authority:
The politics and poetics of experience



>From ethnic cosmologies and narratives of survival to the lyricism of
love and loss – cultures are built on verbal reproductions of
experience, on their dissemination through arrays of oral, written,
and other verbal media, and on the complex relations between
participants in these discourses.



The leading theme for this conference is a focus on constructions of
knowing and the known – the objective known and the imaginary known –
and on the media by which these knowledges are transmitted: media of
language, paralanguage, and non-language.  That entails a particular
interest in topics of change, persistence, marginalisation, and
contestation.



Building on the previous OWOVM (cf
https://ocs.usask.ca/ocs/index.php/theoral/) at the University of
Saskatchewan in 2008, this conference is for both practitioners and
researchers in discourse and the language arts and in related fields.
It expressly provides a forum for explorations of Indigeneity and
autochthony, orality and literacy, and ideologies around cultural
reproduction.  It brings together composers and performers across
creative fields including language, voice, and text, as well as
scholars from a range of fields in the creative arts, humanities, and
social sciences.[i]



How do performances or texts bear witness, either to the events they
narrate or to the subjective consciousnesses that produce them?  How
do the dynamics of transmission circumscribe and transform them?  How
do they become embedded in the knowledge systems of the cultures they
work through?  And what of the limits to verbalisation – when voice,
text, and/or more visceral media are tasked with creating and
communicating meaning in the absence of language grammars?



This is a first call for proposals of language art performances and
installations and of scholarly papers and sessions that address these
questions.  Regular sessions will be 90 minutes, normally containing
three individual presentations.  As much as possible, the organisers
aim to generate a mix of scholarly and creative presentations in each
session, grouped around common thematic concerns.  Keynote
presentations will be announced in the second call for proposals.



Details for proposals

The Programming Committee welcomes your proposals and any preliminary
queries.  Please email these to: [email protected].  The Committee will
begin reviewing first-round proposals on 2 August 2010.



Proposal for an individual presentation

Please submit an abstract or synopsis of up to 200 words, plus a
biography of up to 50 words for each presenter and up to 5 keywords
for the presentation.  Individual presentations will normally be for
15-20 minutes (the chairing will be tight on timelines), plus time for
audience questions and comment.  Please be clear about whether your
proposal is principally scholarly or creative in its purposes.



Proposal for a 90-minute session

If you have arranged three presentations that will occur within your
session, please submit proposals for them (as above), plus a session
title, an abstract or synopsis of up to 300 words for your session,
and a biography of up to 50 words for your proposed session chair.
Your session abstract should be clear about the proposed order of
presenters.  If you wish to depart from the usual conference timings
(eg if you wanted to group questions and comments in a single block at
the end of the session), then please set out such information clearly
in your proposal — otherwise the Programming Committee will assume
normal parameters apply.  Note that sessions combining scholarly and
creative presentations are especially encouraged.



Supporting equipment

Victoria University classrooms have a standard lectern setup with
computer, projector, and internet access.  If you have particular
preferences (eg large projector screen, enhanced speakers for playing
music, etc), please make them clear in your proposal.  The Programming
Committee will genuinely strive to accommodate all timely requests for
which we can access the equipment you need.





________________________________



________________________________

________________________________
________________________________

[i] The fields covered at OWOVM will include, but not be limited to:

·         Acoustics.

·         Communications and media.

·         Cultural anthropology.

·         Folklore.

·         Gender studies.

·         History.

·         Indigenous studies.

·         Linguistics.

·         Literary studies.

·         Music.

·         Narrative approaches to social research.

·         Oral-traditional poetics and narrative.

·         Performance studies.

·         Philosophy.

·         Qualitative approaches to law and criminology.

·         Rhetoric.

·         Visual arts.


****
Dr Tom Clark

Senior Lecturer

School of Communication and the Arts

Victoria University (Melbourne)



[email protected]

Tel. +61 (0)3 9919 2196

Fax. +61 (0)3 9919 2658

Mob. +61 (0)432 754 238
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