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Apologies for duplication-
Forwarding this CFP for the Theatre Library Association Plenary at this year's ASTR conference (http://www.astr.org/?page=Conference).

--Diana


Diana King
Librarian for Film, Television and Theater | World Arts and Cultures/Dance | Gender and LGBT Studies
UCLA Arts Library |1400 Public Affairs Building | Box 951392 | Los Angeles, CA 90095-1392
Telephone: 310-206-4823 | Fax: 310-825-1303 | Email: [log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>

From: Theatre Library Association list [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Colleen Reilly
Sent: Thursday, January 09, 2014 6:48 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: CFP: TLA Plenary at ASTR/TLA 2014

The Paradox of the Post-Human:  Archival Subjects, Systems, and Sites
ASTR/TLA 2014 Conference TLA Plenary Call for Proposals
November 20-23, 2014
Baltimore Marriott Waterfront, Baltimore MD

Archival methodologies seek to re-construct the theatrical past through interventions by scholars, practitioners, librarians, and archivists.   The archive is re-animated through human intervention, but first the ephemerality of performance is fixed in time through the creation of archival surrogates. Inert materials populate the temporal space previously inhabited by theatre makers and their documentarians.  Some ensemble companies like the Wooster Group deliberately engage these proxies in performance, while others like the Studio for Electronic Theatre re-position theatre makers through avatars and cybernetic art.

This panel invites papers that investigate the paradox of the post-human in the broadening spectrum of archival subjects, systems, and sites.  What do these archival subjects tell us about human culture?  How are archival sites constructed in the digital age?  What new challenges and opportunities are posed by multimedia, digital content and information systems? How do these information systems operate?  Where do individual or institutional memories reside, and what technologies can best support them?

Panelists are invited to consider the following:

Archival Subjects

  *   *Virtuality, avatars, digital doubles, and surrogates
  *   *Cybernetic theatre/Non-Human presence/Internet performance
  *   *Agency of things: props, puppets, and proxies

Archival Systems

  *   *Repositioning the human in a system of information, as subject, agent, and arbiter
  *   *Virtual archives
  *   *Genealogies of multimedia performance

Archival Sites

  *   *"Post-human" archival experience
  *   *Human finding aids and institutional knowledge
  *   *Community (user) contributors:  tagging and distributed processing by those outside the profession

Proposals should be submitted as an abstract (maximum 250 words) that includes name, affiliation, mailing and e-mail address.  Full-length papers will not be accepted.  Individual presentations should not exceed 20 minutes.  All submissions must be received by February 15, 2014 and should be sent as e-mail attachments in MS Word to: c<mailto:[log in to unmask]>[log in to unmask]<mailto:[log in to unmask]>.

Plenary Co-Chairs:  Colleen Reilly, Slippery Rock University and Lisbeth Wells-Pratt, University of Georgia


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