Categories |
![]()
MUSIC
![]()
FILM
![]()
CULTURAL STUDIES
![]()
PERFORMANCE
|
About |
In recent years, technologies once viewed as obsolescent have surged back into the mainstream. Contemporary consumers collect not only secondhand vinyl records, but also cassettes, VHS tapes, reel-to-reels, film cameras, slides, and prints; they purchase and use refurbished or newly produced record players, cassette decks, Polaroid cameras, and Super 8s. Meanwhile, contemporary artists and musicians engage once-obsolete formats and techniques in their practice, releasing albums on cassette, for instance, or using 16mm film. Why are these media formats and technologies experiencing such a resurgence? How do consumers and artists creatively engage them? And what do these contemporary engagements mean? This interdisciplinary symposium invites theoretically informed proposals for work drawing on ethnographic, historical, and practice-led approaches to these questions. Participants may address (but are not limited to) the following themes: |
Call for Papers |
We invite proposals for individual papers, film screenings, lecture-demonstrations, and roundtables on the multifaceted afterlives of analog media and technology. Abstracts (250 words) should also include title of the presentation, presenter name(s) and affiliation(s), email address contact, and a short biography (100 words). |
Credits and Sources |
[1] Analog Afterlives 2020 : Obsolescence / Mediation / Re-Collection |