CFP: Things That Move: The Material Worlds of Tourism and Travel
Denis Salter
denis.salter at MCGILL.CA
Thu Nov 2 11:34:22 EST 2006
Dear Colleagues,
Alhough theatre, drama, and performance studies are not explicitly cited, I suspect proposals emerging from these interrelated disciplines would be most welcome.
Things that Move:
The Material Worlds of Tourism and Travel
19 - 23 July, 2007, Leeds, United Kingdom
Whatever the prophecies of 'virtual' reality, we inhabit and move through the 'real' world of objects. Though tourism and travel are bound to concepts of time and space, they are also rooted in the material world - a tangible world of places, things, edifices, buildings, monuments and 'stuff'. The relationships we develop and share with these things varies from the remote to the intimate, from the transient to the lasting and from the passive to the passionate. Within the practices of tourism and its use (and non-use) of the material world, and, though the act of travel, objects are given meaning, status, and are endowed with symbolism and power. Objects construct, represent and even define the tourist experience. Our journeys through the world of objects generate a plethora of emotions - pleasure, attachment, belonging, angst, envy, exclusion, loathing and fear - and feed on-going discourse and narratives. Moreover, through tourism, and our touristic encounters, the material world itself is challenged and changed.
CALL FOR PAPERS
In this, our fifth annual international research conference, we seek to explore the multi-faceted relationships between tourism and material culture - the built environment, infrastructures, consumer and household goods, art, souvenirs, ephemera and landscapes. As in previous events, the conference aims to provoke critical dialogue beyond disciplinary boundaries and epistemologies and thus we welcome papers from the following disciplines: aesthetics, anthropology, archaeology, architecture, art and design history, cultural geography, cultural studies, ethnology and folklore, history, heritage studies, landscape studies, linguistics, museum studies, philosophy, political sciences, sociology, tourism studies and urban/spatial planning.
Key themes of interest to the conference include:
· Histories, mobilities, and the symbolic/political economies of tourism objects
· The dialectics of tourism objects and places / spaces
· Structures / infrastructures of international tourism - building / architecture / design for tourism and tourists
· Aesthetics of objects in a touristic context
· Tourist art and art for tourists
· The performance of material culture in the tourism realm
· Language and the translation of objects in tourism
· The tourist souvenir - commodity fetishism and religious relics
· The tourist object as metaphor and memory
· Ownership, display and interpretation - contested pasts and presents
· Curating for tourism - collecting the worlds of the tourist
· Overcoming the material through the virtual - future realms of tourist experience
Please submit your 300 word abstract including a title and full contact details as an electronic file to Professor Mike Robinson (ctcc at leedsmet.ac.uk) as soon as possible but no later than March 23rd 2007.
=====
Daniela Carl
Centre for Tourism and Cultural Change
Faculty of Arts & Society
Leeds Metropolitan University
The Old School Board
Calverley Street
Leeds
LS1 3ED
UK
phone +44 (0)113- 283 8541
x 28 541
fax +44 (0)113- 283 8544
www.tourism-culture.com
=====
_________________________________________________________________
" . . . we have to accept that our tragedy lies always in our past, that we have to live with our ancestors' folly and suffer for it, just as they, in their turn, suffered, and as we, through our vanity and ignorance, ensure the pain and suffering of our own children. How to correct history, that's the thing."--Robert Fisk
____________________________________
"In 2005, the world . . . pass[ed] the trillion-dollar mark in the expenditure, annually, on arms. We're fighting for $50 billion annually for foreign aid for Africa: the military total outstrips human need by 20 to 1. Can someone please explain to me our contemporary balance of values?" --Stephen Lewis.
__________________________________________________
Denis Salter
Professor of Theatre
McGill University
853 Sherbrooke St. West
Montréal, QC
H3A 2T6
Tel (514) 398 6592
Regular Fax (514) 398 8146
Computer Fax (309) 294 0444
denis.salter at mcgill.ca
__________________
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://artsservices.uwaterloo.ca/pipermail/candrama/attachments/20061102/3bbc5c2d/attachment.html>
More information about the Candrama
mailing list