Call for papers
Objects –
What Matters? Technology,
Value and Social Change
University of Manchester, 1–4
September 2009
As contemporary social theorists continue to signal the need to
reconfigure our deliberations on the social through attention to practice, to object-mediated
relations, to non-human agency and to the affective dimensions of human sociality,
this conference takes as its focus the objects and values which find themselves at
centre stage. And we ask, in the context of nearly two decades of diverse disciplinary
approaches to these issues, what matters about objects? How are they inflecting our
understandings of technology, of expertise, and of social change? How has a focus
on objects reconfigured our understandings of how values inflect the ways in which
people make relations, create social worlds, and construct conceptual categories?
How have objects become integral to human enthusiasms and energies, to transformational
ambition, or to the transmission of values across time and space? How do objects
move between ordinary and extraordinary states, shade in and out of significance,
manifest instability and uncertainty? How do moral and material values attach to
objects as they move in space and time? What dimensions do they inhabit and/or reveal?
To address these questions we welcome papers on the following themes:
- The transformational work of everyday objects
- Object-centered learning
- Materiality, Stability and the State
- Radical Archives – within and beyond textual assemblages
- Conceptual Objects and Methods as Objects
- Immaterial Objects – haunting, virtuality, traces.
- Financial Objects
- Affective Objects
- Ephemera, Enthusiasm and Excess
- Spiritual and/or Moral Objects
- Controversial and Messy Objects
Please submit either (a) proposal for individual papers, or (b) panel
proposal including 3 papers by the end of February 2009.
Web source: http://www.cresc.ac.uk/events/conference2009/index.html