On the occasion of our tenth anniversary, photographies journal is holding a conference aiming to bring together thinkers and photographers in discussion on photography today. We invite papers to revisit our original agenda in the light of photography now:
photographies seeks to construct a new agenda for theorising photography as a heterogeneous medium that is changing in an ever more dynamic relation to all aspects of contemporary culture. photographies aims to further develop the history and theory of photography, considering new frameworks for thinking and addressing questions arising from the present context of technological, economic, political and cultural change.
We further invite you to make submissions that address:
· photography as a heterogeneous ‘medium’
· new frameworks for thinking photographic practices and industries of photography,
· examine contemporary uses and currencies of the photographic image within local/global contexts
· identify and developing (emergent) critical debates and practices
· reflect on critical theoretical issues in relation to photography education.
Conference: Thursday 18 May & Friday 19 May, 2017
Venue: University of Westminster (Central London), UK
Each day will include discussions by members of the journal’s advisory board.
Conference Conveners: Prof. David Bate, University of Westminster; Prof. Liz Wells, Plymouth University
Conference Administration: University of Westminster & Plymouth University
Papers
The call for 20-30 minute papers is now open.
We encourage photo researchers to submit a practice and/or research based abstract of no more than 350 words that relate to:
· New debates and developments in photography theory;
· Speculative ideas and currencies in photography;
· Geographies of representation: borders, space, place and migration, movement, dislocation, memory;
· The legacy of photography theories (e.g. poststructuralism, Marxist theories) for photography writing and practice;
· The politics of representation as related to the fluidities of image circulation;
· Theory, criticism and photography education;
· Ways of teaching photography from global and contemporary perspectives;
· The rapid growth of photography books, journals, magazines, blogs and social media based criticism and practices
Practice-led creative-critical papers and innovative (2/3 person) panel proposals are welcome.
Proposals should be sent to elizabeth.chapman-lane@plymouth.ac.uk
Deadline: 14th November 2016
All proposals will be peer reviewed.
Download the call for papers in PDF (507 Kb)
We aim to let you know by mid-January whether your paper or presentation has been accepted. Proposals should include the following:
Title of paper or presentation
Abstract (max 350 words)
Visual material (if practice-led – max 12 jpegs)
Your name
Institutional status (if applicable) and 20 word bio
Contact address and email
Full details of further deadlines, conference fees, speakers and associated events will be posted on www.tandfonline.com/loi/rpho20#.V5nVlv72amQ
Please submit proposals to elizabeth.chapman-lane@plymouth.ac.uk, Plymouth University