Friday, March 25, 2011

Final Reminder: CFP: "Unexpected Agents" Postgraduate Symposium (4/1/2011; 6/24/2011)


Unexpected Agents: considering agency and subjectivity beyond the boundaries of the human (1800 to the present day)
Hosted by the English Department at the University of Birmingham
24 June 2011

Whilst questions of human subjectivity and/or identity remain a persistent focus in literary and cultural studies, this one-day postgraduate symposium aims to consider how we might explore and account for agency from unexpected sources. Papers, plenaries and discussions at this symposium will place the non-human, the object, the supposedly "lifeless" at the centre, with a view to casting new light on and rethinking definitions of human agency and identity from an unconventional, askance perspective.

Bruno Latour and the Actor Network Theory (ANT) to which his work is seminal have interrogated the ways in which our reified notion of "the social" has obfuscated the role and potential agency of apparently inanimate objects. When we consider "the social," Latour argues, emphasis overwhelmingly falls upon the agency of intentional human actors. That objects too might be considered as actors or agents has not been granted due attention, since from "the very definition of actors and agencies most often chosen, if action is limited a priori to what 'intentional,' 'meaningful' humans do, it is hard to see how a hammer, a basket, a door closer […] could act." In other words, because the ways in which an object might be considered to ‘act’ appears so incommensurate with the apparently purposeful, intentional and highly thought-out actions of human beings, the idea that objects might be considered as agents in their own right has suffered much neglect in sociological discourse.  ANT is largely concerned with attacking this imbalance.

This symposium aims to acknowledge and yet exceed Latour’s and others’ focus upon the agency of objects to envision how authors, theorists and cultural producers have imagined and re-imagined the potential agencies of a wide range of entities, to which and to whom access to power is conventionally seen as foreclosed. It will explore how this over-looked but fascinating trope persists across genres and historical boundaries, from Romanticism to Science Fiction, and from 1800 to the present day.

Plenary Speaker: Dr. Sarah Kember of Goldsmiths, University of London

The organisers invite 200-word proposals from postgraduate research students for 20-minute papers which engage with the symposium theme discursively and imaginatively.  Papers might focus on the following kinds of "unexpected agent":

 *   Objects (art objects, artefacts, antiques)
 *   Spaces/ Landscapes
 *   Ghosts and the deceased
 *   Mediums and the hypnotised
 *   Babies/ Infants
 *   Animals
 *   Technology (radio, machines, scientific apparatus)
 *   Nature
 *   Words themselves

The deadline for proposals is Friday 1 April 2011.

Please send your proposals to unexpectedagents@gmail.com